+ : as yi Reports of | eae a ~ The Princeton University oe : to Patagonia, ee : * J. B. HATCHER w Cuanes e EDITED BY Lm Lon WILLIAM B:-SCOTT ; ae ; ew me BLAIR PROFESSOR OF GEOLOGY AND PALMONTOLOGY, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY J i ¢ , ° ni Ss ® | if VOLUME Ill , : : } A ms ; i x oe 1 cpt z OF atti, A ZOOLOGY 1 ates pence _PartT 1, Mammatia or SoupHern Pataconia Sf BY : x ‘ ay Vs pa J ACALLEN: 4 Soe oA hee 1 { AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, NEW YORK q a i ee 1 a. Na Soa, f ON et ee av” > en ve Mets eins, NP » 4 | ue % , 1 “ f Y, a eal cers (Pp. 1-210. *Pl. I-XXIX) ( ies ae y ¥ : : } ; Res - 5 Oe ‘es ad . bent 5 wad ut e's are et i det REM Soe PRINCETON, N. J, J ee ej Beek. Tue UNIVERSITY ee Be BEN ae A € STUTTGART ; rot & ‘E. Scuweizerpart’scuzt VERLAGSHANDLUNG (E. NAcELE) t Bea’ S Ms ‘ a TOSS 2 ’ j i, ; bis : Pa ar Se SVNT CNTs i 5 re EBAY OF ee eae g \ ; ri ae 4 | MARINE DARIEALOGY | 5 ‘SWPRSOMMN INSTITUTION | he en Ved id - > werk sigh REMINGEON KELLOGG © satay. %, 4 oe Gay, Somat S In Len. jwz lk f 22 fp A Pe / PABST MAMMALIA OF SOUTHERN PATAGONIA. J. A. ALLEN, AmeEriIcAN Museum or Natura Hisrory, New York. INTRODUCTION. HE area covered by the present report includes that portion of Argentina situated south of south latitude 40°, Tierra del Fuego, and the southern part of the Chilian Territory of Magellan, or that portion of it lying west of Tierra del Fuego. The main Andean chain thus forms the western boundary. Its basis is primarily the collections made by the Princeton Expeditions, gathered mainly in the Territory of Santa Cruz, to which material it was intended at first to restrict the report. Later it seemed desirable to extend the scope to include what seems to be a fairly well marked faunal region. Finally, to impart to it something of the character of a monograph, and perhaps thus add to its usefulness, it was decided to include not only full bibliographical refer- ences, but also, in most instances, descriptions of the species, and such accounts of their life histories as could be conveniently brought together, including especially the field notes of the collectors. The Princeton Expedition’s collections of mammals were made partly on the coast, and partly in the interior at the eastern base of the Andes, by O. A. Peterson in 1897, and Mr. E. A. Colburn in 1898, and aggre- gate about 600 specimens. A few specimens collected by Mr. Barnum Brown in 1899, and by him presented to the American Museum of Natu- ral History, and various specimens belonging to the U. S. National Museum have also been utilized, while great assistance has been derived from the examination of the material from this and adjoining parts of South America in the British Museum. I 2 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Mr. Peterson’s collection! numbers about 370 specimens, of which 134 —70 large mammals, and 64 small mammals—were taken along the coast, at different points from the Rio Gallegos to the Rio Coy, from May 13 to November 29, of which the greater part were collected in July and August, and are thus in midwinter pelage. They include a large series of the Guanaco and Gray Fox, and about 64 Rodents of various species. The remaining, and by far the larger part of the collection (about 240 specimens), was made on the headwaters of the Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, at the eastern base of and in the Cordilleras, including a few from the Pacific Slope. These embrace a small series of the Chilian Deer or Gua- mul, the rest being Rodents, which number nearly 20 species. The Cor- dilleras collection was made January 31 to March 6, and hence consists of midsummer to early fall specimens, and they are thus not satisfactorily comparable with the coast series. The coast series, however, fortunately contains, in several instances, summer and winter specimens of the same species, showing the quite different pelages of the two seasons. The Peterson collection was purchased by Dr. C. Hart Merriam for the Bio- logical Survey, and now forms part of the collection of the U. S. National Museum. Mr. Colburn’s collection consists of about 200 specimens, of which 18, representing five species, were taken at Punta Arenas during the first week in January; and 10 were taken near Port Desire (labelled ‘‘ Mount Observation ’’), February 21-23, and represent three species. Then fol- lowed a continuous journey of some 250 miles up the Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, to the mouth of the Rio Belgrado, during which no specimens of mammals appear to have been collected, and only a few (about 25) were taken on the way north from the Rio Belgrado to the vicinity of Lake Buenos Aires.2 During the month of April work was prosecuted con- ? While Mr. Peterson was charged with the collecting of the recent material, it should be noted that Mr. Hatcher at all times codperated with him in the work, and that many of the specimens were collected by him. (See Hatcher, Narrative of the Expedition, pp. 62, 65, 138, 144.) ? Most of the specimens are labelled “ Arroyo Eche” (= Aike) a locality not indicated on maps nor even mentioned in Mr. Hatcher’s Narrative of the expedition, but which he has kindly located for me as covering the Basalt Cafions and Swan Lake localities, the dates on the labels indicating to which they refer. While Mr. Colburn’s specimens are well made, and are accom- panied by measurements, indication of sex and date of collecting, he informs me that he “took no field notes.” Besides this, about one third of the skulls are unavailable for study, owing either to their actual loss or to the loss of their labels, or to illegibility of the labels due to soiling from lack of care in the preservation of the skulls. ALLEN: MAMMALIA OF SOUTHERN PATAGONIA. 3 tinuously at camps in the Basalt Cafions, a pampa country having an altitude of about 3,000 feet. A few specimens were collected near Swan Lake, some fifty miles to the southward, in March, but none were taken after May 15, during the return journey to the coast. Hence nearly all of the 200 specimens collected by Mr. Colburn were taken in March, April, and the first half of May, or during the season corresponding to fall in northern latitudes, and in the elevated pampa country, at the east- ern base of the Andes, between the mouth of Rio Belgrado and Lake Buenos Aires. This collection is the property of the Princeton Univer- sity, except a series of the duplicates which has been presented to the American Museum of Natural History. The coast material is especially important as containing practically topo- types of a number of Waterhouse’s species of Muridz, based on specimens collected by Darwin during the voyage of the “‘ Beagle.”” The sub-Andean series represents a wholly new field, and, as might be expected, contains forms allied, on the one hand, to species previously known only from Tierra del Fuego, and on the other, to species described from Mendoza, nearly a thousand miles to the northward. A number of these prove to be new, though not widely different, respectively from their northern or southern allies. In attempting to work up this material —the first collection of mammals of any magnitude ever received in this country from Patagonia—it was recognized at the outset that it would be of the utmost importance to make direct comparison of the species represented in it with the types and other authentic material from the same general region contained (almost exclu- sively) in the British Museum, in which are the types of Bennett’s and Waterhouse’s species, described more than a half century ago, and the types of Thomas’s more recently described species from northern Argen- tina and Paraguay. Accordingly a good series of specimens was taken to London during the summer of 1901, and through the kindness and cordial assistance of Mr. Oldfield Thomas, Curator of Mammals at the British Museum, I was able to make the necessary critical comparisons with the historic material relating to South American Mammalogy contained in this great Museum. Following the custom of earlier days, the Bennett and Waterhouse types were exhibited for many years as mounted specimens, and thus through long exposure to light suffered much deterioration, but they are still, of course, invaluable as standards of reference. 4 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. In the present report only such species are included as have been defi- nitely recorded from within the geographical limits of the region here under consideration. Possibly a few already recorded have been over- looked. However that may be, doubtless many described from points further north will be found to extend into it, and probably some, not here included, described from the coast district of southern Chili, will be found to extend southward and eastward into Patagonia. As very few of the species of this region have been adequately figured, as regards the skull and dentition, advantage is taken of the present oppor- tunity to publish illustrations of the cranial and dental characters of a considerable number of species, particularly among the Rodents, to serve as standards of comparison in considering allied forms. As regards the general facies of the Patagonian land mammal fauna, the paucity of types is noteworthy, due to the high southern latitude of the region. It is of course far beyond the range of monkeys and marsupials, while bats, of one or two species, barely reach its northern border. The families Leporide, Dasyproctide, and Sciuride are absent, and the Ruminants are represented by the Guanaco, this region being its metrop- olis, and by a single species of deer. The Mustelidz are represented by three genera, Conepatus, Lyncodon, and Lutra, while’ the Canide and Felidz have each several species. A single species of Armadillo is found as far south as the Rio Santa Cruz. There are two representatives of the Caviide, and the family Chinchillidz is represented by one of its three genera. The abundant genus Cyexomys alone represents the Octodon- tide; but the region may be said to be the headquarters of the Murine genera Reithrodon and Euneomys. Its other characteristic genera of Muridze are Akodon, Oxymycterus, Phyllotis, and Eligmodonta, while the wide ranging genus Ovyzomys has here a few outlying species. The only murine genus peculiar to the region is /Voftomys, known thus far by a single specimen taken near Santa Cruz, nearly twenty years ago, by the French Mission Scientifique du Cap Horn. The shores and outlying islands of Patagonia were formerly great resorts of antarctic types of Pinnipedia, representatives of which still exist, but in greatly reduced numbers, including of the Otariida, the genera Otaria and Arctocephalus, and of the Phocide the genera A/zvounga, Flydrurgus, Leptonychotes and Lobodon. ; During the preparation of this work several new forms have been dis- ALLEN: MAMMALIA OF SOUTHERN PATAGONIA. 5 covered among the Rodents, and several changes of nomenclature in other groups proved imperative, and have been made known in advance of the publication of the completed work. The following papers have therefore been the outgrowth of the present undertaking.’ In this connection my thanks are especially due to Dr. C. Hart Mer- riam, who kindly turned over to me the whole of the Peterson Collection of Mammals for elaboration ; to Professor W. B. Scott of Princeton Uni- versity, at whose solicitation this work was undertaken, for superintending the preparation of a large part of the drawings for the illustrations here presented, and for seconding in every way my efforts to secure a satis- factory presentation of the results of my work; to Mr. J. B. Hatcher for an early transcript of his field notes (since published in his narrative, to which they are herein duly credited); to Mr. Barnum Brown, who accom- panied the Princeton Patagonian Expedition of 1899, for important field notes, a few specimens, and much verbal information about the country ; *tg01. New South American Muridze and a new Metachirus. Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XVI, pp. 405-412, Nov. 30, Igo!. Eligmodontia morgant, sp. nov. ( p. 409), Patagonia. 1901. The proper generic names of the Viscacha, Chinchillas, and their Allies. Proc. Biol, Soc. Washington, XIV, pp. 181, 182, Dec. 12, 1901. On the relation of the generic name Ca//omys D’Orb. & Geoff. 1901. Note on the names of a few South American Mammals. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, XVI, pp. 183-185, Dec. 12, 1901. The specific name ci/iatus Fischer (1814) shown to antedate patagonicus Desmarest (1819) for the Armadillo of southern Patagonia. 1902. The Generic and Specific Names of some of the Otariide. Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XVI, pp. 111-118, March 15, 1902. Otaria byronia (Blainville) adopted for the Southern Sea Lion, and discussion of its synonymy. ss ; 1902. A further note on the name of the Argentine Viscacha. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, XV, p. 196, Oct. 10, 1902. Oken, instead of Schinz, shown to be the authority for the name Véscaccia, and the specific name of the Viscacha to be chz/ensis Oken instead of maximus Desmarest. 1902. Mammal names proposed by Oken in his “ Lehrbuch der Zoologie.” Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Fiist., XVI, pp. 373-389, Oct. 11, 1902. The generic name Viscaccta carried back from Schinz (1825) to Oken (1816), and chélensts Oken (1816) shown to have priority over maximus Desmarest (1817), for the Viscacha of Azara. 1903. Descriptions of New Rodents from Southern Patagonia, with a Note on the Genus Euneomys Coues, etc. Bull, Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, pp. 185-196, May 9, 1903. Ctenomys robustus, C. sericeus, C. colburni, Oxymycterus microtis, Reithrodon cuniculoides obscurus, R. hatchert, and Euneomys petersoni, spp. et. subsp. nov. 6 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. to Mr. Oldfield Thomas, of the British Museum, for free access to the collections under his charge, and for much valuable assistance. Subclass DEIN AoA. Order DASYPODA. Of the Edentates, so numerously represented in tropical America, only the Armadillos reach Patagonia, and of these only a single species is repre- sented in the collections made by the Princeton University Expeditions ; and this finds its southern limit of distribution at the Rio Santa Cruz. A second species of Armadillo, 7ata hybridus (Dasypus hybridus Desm.), is recorded from northern Patagonia, and is said to extend as far south as to the Rio Negro, which region, however, is outside of the geographic limits assigned to the present report. Not only are the Sloths (Bradypodidz) and the Anteaters (Myrmecopha- gidz) absent from the existing fauna of Patagonia, but, according to Pro- fessor Scott, no trace of them has yet been found in the Santa Cruz beds, in which Armadillos are represented in such great abundance and diver- sity. This seems to show, as stated by Scott, that the true Sloths and Anteaters ‘‘must have originated in some other part of the South American Continent and were prevented by climatic or other barriers from extend- ing their range into Patagonia.” ! The majority of the Armadillos of the Santa Cruz beds ‘belong to extinct lines,’ which for the most part ‘‘are not known to pass beyond the limits of the Santa Cruz formation.’’ To quote from Professor Scott (2 ¢., p. 8) in respect to the relationship of the extinct to the modern forms, he says: “Attention has already been called to the difference between the Santa Cruz and the recent Armadillos, a difference which can be made clear in afew words. No probable forerunner of Dasypus, Priodontes, Tolypeutes, Chlamydophorus, or Tatu, has been found in these beds, though some one of the species of Prozaédius was almost certainly an ancestor of the recent Zaédyus, and it is possible, though far from certain, that some species of Stenotfatus stood in the same relation to the modern Cadassous. In view of the stage of differentiation attained by the Santa Cruz Arma- ‘Reports Princeton University Exped. Patagonia, Vol. V, Part I, 1903, p. 4. ALLEN: MAMMALIA: DASYPODIDA. if dillos, it is most improbable that all these modern types should have originated since that period. This confirms the conclusion indicated by several other mammalian series, that in Miocene times Patagonia was not the principal theatre of evolution of the South American fauna. This would explain the entire absence from the Santa Cruz beds of many types which would naturally be expected to occur there.”’ Famity DASYPOD/D Az. Genus ZAEDYUS Ameghino. Zaédyus Ameghino, Contr. al Conoc. Mamm. fos. Rep. Argent., 1889, 867. Type, Dasypus minutus Desmarest. Dasypus, Auct., part. Euphractus, Auct., part. ZAEDYUS CILIATUS (Fischer). (Plates I, Animal ; I, Skeleton ; III, Skulls.) Tatou pichty Azara, Quad. Paraguay, II, 1801, 192. Dasypus ciliatus G. Fischer, Zoognosia, II], 1814, 127. Based on “le tatou pichiy Azara.”’ Zaédyus cilliatus Allen, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, 183, Dec. 12, 19OI (“‘celliatus”’ in error for celiatus). _ Dasypus patagonicus Desmarest, Nouv. Dict. d'Hist. Nat., XXII, 1819, 491. Based on “ le tatou pichiy, Azara.”’ Dasypus minutus Desmarest, Mamm., ii, 1822, 371. Based on “le tatou pichiy ou tatou septi¢éme ” of Azara, and hence = Dasypus patagonicus Desm., 1819.— Fischer, Syn. Mamm., 1829, 393. — Waterhouse, Voy. Beagle, Mamm., 1839, 93, notes on distribution and habits by Dar- win. —Turner, P. Z. S., 1851, 214. — Wagner, Schreber’s. Saug. suppl, IV, 1844,- 177; V;. 1855; 176,'— Cassin, U.S Expl exp: (Wilkes), Mamm. and Orn., 1858, 54, Rio Negro, Patagonia. — Prichard) P+ ZS: Today I a773 Through Patagonia, 1902, 40, 67, 248 (distribution), 258. Tatusta minuta Lesson, Man. de Mamm., 1827, 312.—Gray, Mamm. Br. Mus., 1843, 190. — Gerrard, Cat. Bones Mamm., 1862, 286. Dasypus (Euphractos) minutus Burmeister, Reise durch die La Plata- Staaten, II, 1861, 427. 8 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Euphractus minutus Gray, P. Z. S., 1865, 377, fig. skull. Dasypus (Tatusta) minutus Burmeister, Desc. phys. Rép. Argent., III, 1879, 440. Zaédyus minutus, Ameghino, Contr. al Conoc. Mam. fos. Rep. Argent., 1889, 867. Tatusia hybrida Hatcher, Narrative Patagonian Exped., I, 1903, 116. Habits and distribution. General color of cephalic shield and carapace dark brown, irregularly varied with lighter, the lateral edges of both areas much lighter, pale yellow or whitish, particularly the lateral row of plates on the carapace; tail yellowish, mottled with darker; posterior edge of dorsal plates thickly set with very short fine blackish hairs, interspersed with long yellowish brown and whitish bristles, 40 to 50 mm. long, thinly veiling the carapace ; below thickly clothed with long rather coarse hairs, yellowish white on the ventral surface, brownish on the shoulders and thighs ; sides of head thickly covered with fine short dark brown hairs, forming a broad lateral band. Measurements.— Adult male, total length, 395 mm.; tail, 140; hind foot, 63; ear (in dry skin), 14. Adult female, total length, 390; tail, 120; hind foot, 60. Skull, total length, 68-70; zygomatic breadth, 39-42; mastoid breadth, 35-37. Represented by 6 specimens (two immature), collected by Mr. Colburn near Swan Lake, March 5 and 6, and by one specimen collected by Mr. Barnum Brown, near the junction of the Rio Chico and the Rio Santa Cruz. This species, like other Armadillos, varies greatly in cranial characters with age, as shown by the three skulls figured on Plate III, where Fig. 1-16 represents the skull of an animal about half grown; Fig. 2-26, a skull of a much older animal, and apparently full grown to judge by the appearance of the skull; Fig. 3-36 represents the skull of a very old individual, the skull being much larger, very heavily ossified, and dispro- portionately broader than either of the others. Compared with full-grown middle-aged specimens, it differs from the latter so strikingly that, without intermediate specimens, it might readily be mistaken for a different species. According to Mr. Hatcher’s observations, the Rio Santa Cruz forms the southern boundary of the range of the species, whence it extends north- ward to Paraguay and northern Argentina. Mr. Hatcher in referring to the animal life of the country bordering the lower Rio Chalia, chronicles (Narrative, pp. 116, 117) his first meeting ALLEN: MAMMALIA > DASYPODIDé. 9 with this little Armadillo (erroneously here called Zatusta hybrida), and gives the following important imformation about its distribution and habits in southern Patagonia: “In addition to all these and many other birds and mammals, which had been our daily companions ever since our arrival in Patagonia, there was one curious little mammal belonging to an entirely different order, representatives of which we had not met with south of the Santa Cruz River. I refer to the little Armadillo, 7atusca hybrida. Frequent exam- ples of these were to be seen running about over the pampa or lying prone upon the ground. Immediately on touching one of these little animals, they roll themselves up into a compact ball in much the same manner as do some of the leeches or species of chitons, on being detached from the stones to the surface of which they are usually fixed. When in this position the bony covering of the carapace serves to protect them from their ordinary enemies. They live in shallow holes excavated in the surface of the pampa, and if by any chance they succeed in reaching the mouth of one of these before being captured, they force the serrated edges of the carapace into the surrounding dirt in such manner that they can be extracted only with the greatest difficulty. At this latitude they hibernate in winter and prefer a warm sandy soil and sheltered locality. In such places they are fairly abundant north of the Santa Cruz River, but we never observed a specimen south of that stream, nor after careful enquiries could I discover that they had ever been seen by others in the region lying south of this river. It seems probable, therefore, that this stream has afforded an effective barrier to their further distribution to the southward, for not only are there many localities to the south that would seem quite as well adapted to their needs as those to the north, but the entire southern half of the valley of that river is especially well suited to them. Though com- mon in the valley on the north side of the river, no example has ever been taken to my knowledge in the valley on the south side. The temperature of the water in this stream, its great size, and the absolutely treeless nature of the entire region through which it flows renders it particularly capable of presenting an effective barrier to the free migration of certain mammals, and more especially those like Za¢esza, which are probably not capable of swimming and are known to hibernate in winter, at which period alone they would be able to cross such a stream on the ice. Their flesh is of an excellent flavor and highly prized by the natives as food.” 1fe) PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Mr. Prichard confirms Hatcher’s statement regarding the absence of this animal south of the Rio Santa Cruz. He found it ‘‘very common in the vicinity of Bahia Camerones.” He further says: ‘I saw no specimen in the forests of the Andes, but near Lake Buenos Aires and Lake Viedma we found them about the foothills” (2 c., p. 258). Order UNGULATA The Ungulates are represented in the existing fauna of southern Pata- gonia by two species only, the Guanaco, belonging to the Camelidz, and the Guamul, a Cervid. Famity CERV/DA2. The Deer of Patagonia constitutes a peculiar type restricted to the southern Andean region. Although it has only recently become well known, it has a peculiarly interesting literary history, as shown below. Genus HIPPOCAMELUS Leuckart. Fiippocamelus Leuckart, De Equo bisulco Moline, 1816, 23. Type, Azf- pocamelus dubius = Equus bisulcus Molina. — Thomas, P. Z. S., 1898, 212.—T.S. Palmer, Science (2), X, No. 249, Oct. 6, 1899, 494; Index Gen. Mamm., 1904, 326. Cerveguus Lesson, Nouv. Tabl. Régne Anim., 1842, 173. Type and only species, Aguas brsulcus Molina. Furcifer Wagner, Schreber’s Saug. Suppl., IV, 1844, 384. Type and only species, Cervus antistensts Pucheran = Equus bisulcus Molina. — Gray, Po Z..S., 1850,-226: Xenelaphus Gray, P. Z. S., 1869, 498. Type, Xenelaphus huamel, sp. nov.=Fguus bisulcus Molina (fj with malformed antlers). Anomalocera Gray, Scientific Opinion, Oct. 6, 1869, 385. (Cf Philippi, Arch. f. Naturg., 1870, i, 46.) Fluamela Gray, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), X, Dec. 1872, 445 (in text); zb¢d., XI, March, 1873, 217. Type, Auamela leucotis (Gray) = Equus bisulcus Molina. Creagoceros Fitzinger, Sitzb. Akad. Wien, LXVIII, 1873, 358. Includes Cervus antistensts D’Orbigny, and Cervus chilensis Gay & Gervais. In 1782, Molina, as is well known, mentioned and gave names to a large number of the mammals of Chili, describing some of them in suffi- ALLEN: MAMMALIA: CERVIDé. res cient detail for their easy recognition, and others more vaguely, so that their identification is more difficult. Among the latter is the ‘“Guemul,” or ‘Huemul,” which he named technically Aguas db¢sulcus. He certainly could not have been familiar with the animal, and probably described it from hearsay information, comparing it with the horse and ass, and in no way making any suggestion of its relation to the deer tribe. In fact he gives no character that is in any way distinctive of the animal. Yet, apparently mainly on the basis of its vernacular name, the animal is now universally conceded to be the species first properly introduced into scien- tific literature by Gay and Gervais in 1846 under the name Cervas chilensis, which they recognized as ‘‘le Guamul des Chiliens,”’ and also as the Aguas bisulcus of Molina. In the meantime Molina’s animal had been intro- duced into the works of the earlier systematists as a species of Aguus, and as late as 1827 was recorded as a species of Auchenia on the basis of Molina’s account. In 1803 it became the subject of a Latin dissertation by Leuckart, who made it the basis of his genus A/7ppocamelus, substi- tuting at the same time the specific name dudius (Hippocamelus dubius) for Molina’s name ézszdcus. Mr. Lydekker, in his ‘Deer of All Lands,” has adopted, as have Dr. Matschie and others, the name é¢su/cus Molina for the species, but he rejects Hippocamelus, as also the later Cerveguus Lesson, ‘‘on account of their inappropriate nature,” for the later Xewelaphus Gray. This state- ment amounts to the concession that the “‘inappropriateness”’ of the name Hippocame/us is the only objection to its adoption, which is without weight under the rule that names are not to be rejected ‘‘because of barbarous origin, for faulty construction, for inapplicability of meaning, or for erro- neous construction” (A. O. U. Code, Canon XXXI). It must therefore be adopted for the Guamul group of deer, as stated by Mr. Thomas in 1898 and by Dr. T. S. Palmer in 1899. HIpPOCAMELUS BISULCUS (Molina). (Plates IV, V, and VI, Skull.) Equus bisulcus Molina, Sagg. Stor. Nat. Chile, 1782, 320. — Gmelin, Syst. Nat., I, 1788, 209 (ex Molina).— Fischer, Syn. Mam., 1829, 433 (ex Molina). Cervus bisulcus Matschie, Ergeb. Hamb. Magalh. Sammelreise, III, 1898, 19. Reinstates Molina’s name Jdzsz/cus. 12 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Mazama bisulca Lydekker, Deer of All Lands, 1898, 296; P. Z.S., 1899, g17, pl. Ixi, animal, and head, text cut. Patagonia.— Berg, Comunic. Mus. nac. de Buenos Aires, I, No. 7, Oct. 1900, 260-263 (full synonymy). Hippocamelus bisulcus Thomas, P. Z. S., 1898, 212, Chubut, East Pata- gonia. ; Xenelaphus bisulcus Prichard, P. Z. S., 1902, I, 172; Through Heart of Patagonia, 1902, 146 (description and half-tone plate of skull), 152 (colored plate of animal in summer coat), 248-251 (habits and distri- bution and text cut of skull). Camelus equinus Treviranus, Mus. Biol., II, 1803, 179 (ex Molina). Hippocamelus dubius Leuckart, De Equo bisulco Molinz, 1816, 24 ; Isis, 1825, 362 (ex Molina). Auchenia huamel Ham. Smith, Griffith’s An. King., V, 1827, 300 (ex Molina). Furcifer huamel Gray, P. Z. S., 1850, 236; Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. (2), IX, May, 1852, 427; Cat. Mamm. Brit. Mus., Ungulata Furc., 1G52,°2277: Cervus (Cerveguus) andicus Lesson, Nouv. Tabl. Régne Anim., 1842, 173 (= Equas bisulcus Molina). Furcifer andicus Lahille, Congr. Cient. Lat. Amer., III, 1899 (1900), 195. Cervus chilensis Gay & Gervais, Ann. des Sci. nat. (3), V, 1846, 91. Chili: original description. —Gay, Hist. Chile, Zool., I, 1847-1854, 159, pl. ii.—Sclater, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), XI, 1873, 213 (with ref- erence to Huamela leucotts Gray); P. Z. S., 1875, 44, text cut of brow antler; synonymy.— Burmeister, Desc. phys. Rép. Arg., III, 1879, 462 (in part). — Philippi, Anal. Mus. nac. Chile, Zool., 1894, pl. 1 he 1, Cervus (Furcifer) chilensts Wagner, Schreber’s Sdug. Suppl., V, 1855, 382. Creagroceros chilensts Fitzinger, Sitzb. Akad. Wien, LXVIII, 1873, 358; wid., LEN XVIL 18797290 f Cariacus (Furcifer) chilensis Brooke, P. Z. S., 1878, 923. Cariacus chilensis Hatcher, Narrative Princeton Univ. Exp. Patagonia, I, LQ03, 135) 275: Capreolus leucotis Gray, P. Z. S., 1849, 64, pl. xii, “shot twenty leagues from Port Famine, Straits of Magellan.” ALLEN: MAMMALIA: CERVID:. ng AXenelaphus leucotis Gray, Cat. Rum. Mamm., 1872, 89 (in part). Huamela leucotis Gray, Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (4) 2%, Dee: 1892445 5 2bid., XI, March, 1873, 214-219, text cut of skull; Hand List Edent., Thick-skinned, and Rum. Mamm. Brit. Mus., L973%/L00: Furcifer chilensis Sclater, List Anim. Zoél. Gardens, 1883, 178, and later editions. —Nehring, Sitzb. Gesell. Naturf. Freunde Berlin, 1885, 188 ; zb7zd@., 1895, 16.—Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., 1898, 897. Form stout and heavy. Antlers small, with a single fork near the base, the front tine less than half as large as the main branch, both nearly ver- tical in direction. Winter Pelage. — General color of body above and limbs grizzled yel- lowish brown; the hairs individually are ashy for about the basal two thirds, then pass gradually into blackish, with a narrow subapical band of pale yellowish brown, and a minute black tip, resulting in a grizzled yel- lowish gray-brown general effect; flanks and ventral surfaces similar, except that the median abdominal area is suffused with blackish; black facial pattern y-shaped, the arms of the y beginning over each eye and uniting on the median line somewhat in front of the eyes and passing forward as a rather sharply defined band to the end of the nose, where it spreads laterally to the sides of the lower jaw, thus forming a black cross- band a little behind the muzzle; a broad, light-colored eye-ring ; lachrymal pit and eyelids blackish; cheeks and sides of neck lighter and grayer than the body; ears well clothed, grayish externally, varied with pale yellow- ish brown, white internally; tail above and on the sides like the back, lower surface white; inguinal region white, passing into pale yellowish brown on the inside of the thighs; inner side of fore legs near the body light yellowish brown; tarsal glandular tuft close to the tarsal joint, the anterior upper two thirds whitish, the lower part dusky passing posteriorly into rusty brown. Measurements. — Two adult males, respectively, total length 1575 mm. and 1727; girth at chest, 965 and 1143. Adult female, total length, 1549; girth at chest, 1143. The following measurements are from an adult mounted male in the American Museum of Natural History (No. 13558), collected by Mr. Peterson at the eastern base of the Cordilleras, at the head of the Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, February 18, 1897: Total length, following the curves of the body, 1750; tail vertebra, 120; hind foot, 425; height at shoulders, 930; ear from crown, 200; from notch, I4 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. 170; main tine of antler from burr, 260; short tine from burr, 165; main tine from fork, 180; short tine from fork, 95. Male skull, adult but not old: Total length, 295; basal length, 260; zygomatic breadth, 107; greatest orbital width, 115; greatest occipital breadth, 88; distance between base of antlers at the skull surface, 52; length of nasals, 100; greatest breadth of nasals, 30; palatal length, 174; anterior palatal foramina (each), 37 x 10; width of palate at m’*, 41; length of upper tooth row, 86; length of lower jaw, inner base of incisors to pos- terior border of condyle, 217; height at condyle, 96; lower premolar-molar series, 89; diastema, 67; Antlers: length of main tine from burr, 225; length of anterior tine from burr, 178 ; length of main tine from fork, 166; of anterior from fork, 113; length of bony pedical, 17. Represented by 5 specimens, 4 males and 1 female, collected at the eastern base of the Cordilleras at the head of the Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, February 10-18 and March 1, 1897, by Messrs. Peterson and Hatcher. The Patagonian Guamul differs from the Peruvian Guamul (//7ppoca- melus antistensts) in smaller size, stouter antlers, with the anterior tine relatively smaller, and the point of bifurcation a little further up from the burr, and the facial black markings less extended posteriorly. In general coloration, and doubtless in habits, the two species have a close general resemblance. The Patagonian animal has been repeatedly described and figured, a recent excellent colored figure of it having been published by Lydekker (Proc. Zod]. Soc. London, 1899, pl. Ixi), together with a good text cut of the head (2. ¢., p.g18). Prichard (¢ c.) has also recently given a good figure of the animal in summer coat. The group of Guamul deer presents a case of unusually complicated synonymy, which, however, has been carefully sifted and straightened out, first by Sclater and later by Matschie, Lydekker, and Berg, by whose labors I have greatly profited in the present connection. On the rather unsatisfactory principle of exclusion, and the vernacular name used by Molina, the three last named authors have seen proper to employ Molina’s specific designation dzsa/cus for the present species, the adoption of which seems unfortunately necessary under the rule of priority, there being of course no reasonable doubt as to what animal Molina so vaguely indicated under this name. As shown by the following field notes, contributed by Mr. Brown, and ALLEN: MAMMALIA: CERVIDA. 15 the excerpts from Mr. Hatcher's ‘ Narrative,” the range of this species in Patagonia is confined to the immediate vicinity of the Cordilleras. Mr. Brown, in referring to this species, says: ‘‘No deer are to be found on the plains, but one species is fairly abundant in the mountains. It is about the size of the Virginia deer ; the males armed with a pair of two-pronged antlers. I killed two and saw many, but only the one species. Unlike the guanaco that have never seen man, these deer are very tame, allowing one to approach within a few yards of them.” (Barnum Brown, MSS. notes.) Mr. Hatcher, in writing of the region to the east and southeast of Lake Buenos Aires, thus refers to the deer: ‘While nowhere in the plains region of Patagonia had we seen the Chilian deer, Cariacus chilensis, yet I was not greatly surprised to en- counter it here in a region which, though destitute of forests and distant from fifty to one hundred and twenty-five miles from the Andes, had all the characteristics of a rugged mountainous region, when one descended from the narrow, flat-topped tablelands to the bottoms of the cafions. I not only met with deer on various occasions in these cafions, but on re- turning to camp after this my first protracted journey in this region, as I was traveling up the chasm in which we had pitched our tent, I came suddenly upon a band of three at a distance of hardly more than half a mile from camp. Since we had thought of remaining where we were for the winter, this seemed an excellent opportunity for providing an ample supply of jerked venison, which is far superior to the flesh of the guanaco.” (idatcher, 7:.¢.,. p: 195.) His first meeting with this animal, however, was in the primeval forests at the base of the Andes, some distance to the southwest near Mayer Basin. He says: ‘After a few hours spent in a vain search for mammalian remains in these beds I started for camp, returning by way of the forest through which I had passed on my way thither. Just as I was emerging from the wooded tract into the meadow land in front, I came suddenly and unexpectedly upon three deer browsing quietly in the grass along the margin of the wood. They were the first I had seen in Patagonia, and for a moment it was evident that I was the most startled individual of the four. They made no effort to escape, as they might easily have done by taking to the wood, but stood at a distance of not more than twenty 16 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. feet, returning my expression of surprise with one of interested curiosity. For an instant I stood admiring the rich golden brown of their sleek, glossy coats, as they alternately cropped the rosebuds and other choice morsels from the foliage about them, or cast inquiring glances toward me. Suddenly, remembering that we had been without fresh meat for breakfast, I deliberately, though reluctantly, drew my revolver from its scabbard, and having for a moment subdued the compassionate feeling with which I had been seized, it required little skill to despatch one of the trio and demonstrate that man is not less brutal than other animals. Indeed, from a certain, and to my mind questionable standpoint, it was about as unsportsmanlike an act as could have been committed. But, like others even more unsportsmanlike which I shall later have occasion to relate, it served the double purpose of providing us with a supply of meat and an addition to our collection of the skins of recent Mammalia. The two companions remained, unalarmed either by the report of the fatal shot, or the death struggles of their companion. While engaged in skinning and dressing the carcass of the dead animal, the live ones stood at a distance of only a few yards, either indifferent, or at most only curious as to the nature of the operation, and I could at any moment have easily despatched them, had I been so inclined. Covering the carcass and skin with brush so as to protect them from the caranchas, I returned to camp, and, saddling a horse, conveyed both to our tent, where they were properly cared for.” ‘(Hateher, 7.c.; pp. 130; 131.) The following forcibly illustrates the tameness of these animals in their native haunts: “In the early morning and late afternoon deer were common about the edges of the wood and in the small open parks within, while in the middle of the day they were frequently met with in the depths of the forests. The degree of confidence and fearlessness displayed by these traditionally timid animals was indeed most remarkable. It was plainly evident that they were entirely unacquainted with man. On one occasion, while tramp- ing through the woods with my shotgun in quest of smaller game, I came upon a full grown male lying quietly at the base of a large tree. As I stopped to observe him, he remained quite still for a moment and looked at me, with nothing of fright in his countenance. Then slowly getting upon his feet he came walking directly toward me with that measured and firm tread characteristic of the family. The entire attitude and bear- ALLEN: MAMMALIA: CAMELIDZ&. Dy ing of the animal resembled that of a favorite cow or horse, as, lazily basking in the barnyard, it rises and advances slowly to lick the proffered hand of its master. I permitted this exhibition of confidence to continue until he had approached to some ten or twelve feet of me, when I showed my unworthiness by exchanging a charge of small for one of solid shot, which, after backing away for a few paces I discharged with such effect that the beautiful animal fell lifeless almost at my feet, a victim of mis- placed confidence.” (Hatcher, 2 ¢., pp. 137, 138.) Mr. Hatcher makes further reference to their tameness, as observed in Mayer Basin, on page 200 of his ‘‘ Narrative,” and again on page 266, when they would approach to within a few feet while he and Mr. Peterson were ‘skinning and dressing the carcass of their fallen comrade, often approach- ing so near that we would be compelled to suspend Operations and urge the spectators to remove to a more respectful distance.” Mr. Prichard’s account of this deer is very full and quite in harmony with the observations of Mr. Hatcher and Mr. Brown, already given, including its tameness, geographical distribution, and general habits. Mr. Prichard says they shed their winter coat in December. He gives a colored plate of the animal in summer coat, and good half-tone illustra- tions of the skull. When he first published his account of the species little had been made public concerning its habits and distribution. (See 7. c., especially pp. 248-251.) Family CAMELIDA:. Genus LAMA Cuvier. Camelus Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 1758, 65 (in part). Lama Frisch, Natur-Syst. vierfiiss. Thiere, 1775 (afd Palmer, Index Gen. Mamm., 1904, 363, 921). —G. Cuvier, Tabl. Elém. Hist. Nat. Anim., 1798, 158 (= “les Lamas”’) ; Legons d’Anat. Comp., I, tab. 1, 1800. — Desmarest, Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat., XXIV, 1804, Tabl. méth. 31. —G. Fischer, Zoognosia, III, 1814, 351.— Gray, Cat. Mamm. Br. Mus., III, Ungulata Furcipeda, 1852, 254. — Thomas, P. Z. S., 1891, 385. Lacma Tiedemann, Zool., I, 1808, 420 (= Lama G. Cuvier, 1798). Auchenia Mliger, Prod. Syst. Nat., 1811, 103 (Lama G. Cuvier ; also pre- occupied for a genus of Coleoptera). —G. Cuvier, Régne Anim., I, 1817, 251. — Wagner, Schreber’s Saug., V, ii, 1838, 1788. 18 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Dromedarius Wagler, Natiirl. Syst. der Amphib., 1830, 31 (to replace Auchenza llliger, preoccupied). The name Lama (Frisch, 1775 ; G. Cuvier, 1798) has priority over the, for a long time, more current name 4uchenza (Illiger, 1811), and should be adopted for the genus, as long since shown by Thomas (/.c.). Of the four forms of these animals commonly recognized, the Guanaco, Llama, Alpaca, and Vicufia, only the first comes within the scope of the present work. Opinions differ as to whether these animals are to be treated as distinct species, or whether they are all to be considered as races of a single species. Mr. Thomas (/ c.) has given his reasons for considering the Vicufia as a distinct species, and the Llama and Alpaca as merely domes- ticated races of the Guanaco, thus recognizing two species. LAMA GLAMA HUANACUS (Molina). Camelus glama Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 1758, 65 (in part — based on the domesticated race). — Shaw, Gen. Zodl., II, ii, 1801, 241, pl. clxviii. Camelus guanacoe P. S. L. Miiller, Natursyst. Suppl., 1776, 26, Patagonia. Camelus lacma G. Cuvier, Tabl. élém. Hist. Nat., 1798, 158. Camelus huanacus Molina, Sagg. Stor. Nat. Chili, 1782, 317. Auchenia huanaca Ham. Smith, Griffith's An. King., V, 1827, 299 (in part). — Tschudi, Fauna Peruana, I, 1844-46 (1846), 222. Lama huanacus Matschie, Ergebn. der Hamb. Magalhzns. Sammelreise, III, Saug., 1898, 19. — Berg, Comun. Mus. nac. de Buenos Aires, I, No. 7, Oct., 1900, 260 (synonymy). Lama huanachus Thomas, P. Z. S., 1891, 387 (nomenclature). — Troues- sart, Cat. Mamm., 1898, 846; Prichard, Through Heart of Patagonia, 1902, 104-107 (Indian method of hunting), 138-140 (hunting), 156 (head of young), 160 (pl., ‘‘descending a hillside’’), 236-239 (habits), 253-257 (habits, etc., side view of head); P. Z. S., 1902, I, 275. Auchenia lama, b. guanaco Wagner, Schreber’s Saug., V, il, 1836, 1803, 1806-1810, pl. cccv a. Auchenia Mama Waterhouse, Zodl. Voy. Beagle, Mamm. ii, 1839, 26 (with notes on habits and distribution by Darwin). Auchenia lama Brandt, Mém. Acad. Imp. St. Pétersb., IV, 1845, 1, pl. i, li. — Cassin, U. S. Expl. Exp. (Wilkes), Mamm. and Orn., 1858, 65 (Rio Negro; Tierra del Fuego). — Burmeister, Desc. phys. Rép. Argent., III, 1879, 457. ALLEN: MAMMALIA: CAMELID/:. 19 Camelus guanaco Traile, Mem. Wern. Nat. Hist. Soc., IV, 1823, 492, pl. Auchenia guanaco Meyen, Nov. Ac. Acad. Leopold.-Czs., XVI, 1833, 552, pl. Ix. Lama guanaco Gay, Hist. Chili, Zool., I, 1847, 153. Lama guanacus Gray, Cat. Mamm. Br. Mus., Ungul. Furcip., 1852, 257, pl xxiv, fis) 2skull: Guanaco, Cunningham, Nat. Hist. Strait Magellan, 1871, 106-109 (habits). — Hatcher, Rep. Princeton Univ. Exped. Patagonia, I, pp. 58, 62, 271, and elsewhere assim (habits and distribution). In winter pelage the general color above is reddish brown, darkening a little on the rump and tail, this being the color of the long over hair, beneath which is a dense, matted covering of short woolly under fur, of much lighter color; flanks and ventral surface white; head all around and ears gray, lighter or paler on the throat and sides of the face, and darker, dusky gray on the whole front and top of the head; edges and tips of the ears and the muzzle whitish; fore limbs externally like the dorsal surface as far as the “knees,” then dark grayish brown to the hoofs, more or less mottled with rufous ; hind limbs externally rufous as far as the callosity, the grayish passing into rufous on the metatarsus and toes: inside of both fore and hind limbs white, like the ventral surface. Young a few weeks old are similar in general coloration and markings to the adults except that the upper parts are lighter rufous and the under parts clearer white. A large series of specimens (about 20) of this species was taken by Messrs. Peterson and Hatcher, chiefly in the vicinity of the coast near Cape Fairweather, but only a small part of them have passed through my hands. Mr. Peterson's measurements show that adults range in total length from about 1950 to 2150 mm., with a girth of about 1270, and that adult females attain very nearly the same dimensions. Much has been published on the habits of the Guanaco, as observed in different parts of its range, by different writers, especially by Darwin, Cunningham, Hudson, and Prichard, but a transcript of Mr. Hatcher’s observations, with a few additional notes by Mr. Barnum Brown, do not appear to be out of place in the present connection. Mr. Brown’s manu- script notes are as follows: “The Guanaco, which is by far the most numerous of the large mammals, ranges from Grandi Island, about 100 miles north of Cape Horn, over all 20 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. of Patagonia that I have traversed; that is north to 46° N., from the Andes to the coast. “Although there are a good many Guanacos on Tierra del Fuego, and a few on the other small islands, Lenox and Grandi, the extremely moist climate, with its consequent peculiarities of vegetation, principally mosses and lichens, does not seem suited to it. “Contrary to Mr. Darwin, I should not call this an elegant animal. It seems ill-proportioned and awkward, especially when running, when the body seemingly has two separate motions, reminding one of a hobby-horse with a movable neck. The Guanaco has but two movements, the walk and the gallop. When galloping both hind legs are moved together, a fact which makés it necessary for the Indians to throw their bola so as to catch a hind and a fore leg, as a bola tied around the hind legs in no way retards the forward movement. “Near settlements, along the coast and rivers where they frequently see men, the Guanaco is quite easily approached, being seemingly not afraid of man, but merely curious. I have often been within fifty yards of them. In fencing in the large estancias great numbers are often enclosed, where they may be seen feeding contentedly with the sheep. In the Andes and on the high pampas, however, where they never see man, one rarely gets closer than three or four hundred yards; more often only a hideous, mirage-distorted figure is seen as they disappear in the distance. Here they are as wild as our western Pronghorn. “During the summer months they feed singly and in small groups scattered over the pampas; rarely more than a dozen are found together. But during the winter months, as the snow gradually covers the grass on the pampas, they range toward the sea coast and rivers, and feed in large herds in the barancas or broken coast where the sea breezes melt the snow. From one hill in the Rincon de Boca, north of Rio Coy, I have counted four herds containing from three hundred to a thousand each. “While feeding one of the males usually stands guard on higher ground, giving the alarm if an enemy appears. This alarm, the only noise I have heard them make except when fighting or brought to. bay, is a prolonged drawn-out neigh. “While camped in an old lake bed near the Cordilleras, I was startled one morning by a series of peculiar screams very much like those of a horse in distress. Running to a hill near by I saw two large males fight- +) ALLEN: MAMMALIA: CAMELIDA. 21 ing. With ears laid back and mouth wide open, one rushed the other, this way and that, now turning, then in a straight run till near enough to cut a gash along his opponent's ribs with his sharp, hooked canines. Furi- ous, the other turns with a scream, and runs after his antagonist till he, too, has scored a mark; and they kept at it over an hour until both were ex- hausted and badly cut up. ‘When bunched during the winter months they feed together and run in close packs after their leaders like sheep. Remarkably fleet and sure- footed, they are as agile as the Rocky Mountain Sheep. When the ground was frozen several feet deep, with an inch melted on top, I have seen them, running at full speed, plunge over cliffs two or three hundred feet high at an angle of 75 degrees, where I deemed it too hazardous to attempt de- scent with the aid of a pick, and never have I seen one come to grief.” As will be seen from Mr. Hatcher's account, this observer does not con- sider the aid of man necessary to account for the presence of the Guanaco in Tierra del Fuego. The following excerpts are from Mr. Hatcher’s ‘‘ Narrative.” ‘““The Guanaco is, to his [the Tehuelche Indian’s] existence, the one im- portant and indispensable animal. From its flesh he derives his chief, and for long periods, only sustenance, while from its skin his industrious wife constructs the family toldo and makes with admirable skill and patience their ample clothing and bedding, fitting and sewing the parts with the nicety and proficiency of a skilled seamstress. A wooden or bone awl, used as a delicate punch, is her needle, and the sinews taken from the loin of the same animal her thread. From this same beast he likewise obtains the sinew for the light but exceedingly strong thongs of his bolas. ‘But the Guanacos are in no danger of extermination. They roam in thousands over the Patagonian plains. So abundant are they that, in traveling across the country, it is scarcely possible to pass out of sight of them. Contrary to the rule with undomesticated animals, the Guanacos inhabiting settled regions are far less timid than those of unsettled dis- tricts. In the region along the coast occupied by the sheep farmers they exist in great numbers, are exceedingly tame, and are a source of consid- erable annoyance to the herdsmen, who, nevertheless, suffer them to go unmolested. Beyond the settlements the Guanacos are more difficult of approach and in the Cordilleras they are exceedingly wary, as is also the Rhea, or so-called Ostrich. This is the more striking and difficult of ex- 22 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. planation, since the deer in the same mountainous region seem abso- lutely fearless and are prompted by curiosity rather than fear when approached... . ‘The Guanaco is not only the largest animal inhabiting Patagonia, but to the Tehuelche, at least, it is surely of the most importance. It is the American representative of the camel and, though readily domesticated, no attempt seems ever to have been made in this region, by either whites or Indians, to bring this species under domestication. There is little doubt, however, that the Llamas and Vicufias, of Peru, are but domesti- cated varieties of the Guanaco. ‘When full grown, the Guanaco is in size about equal to that of a year- ling colt. I have elsewhere described their form, color and peculiar call. They are abundant on the plains, both of the mainland and Tierra del Fuego, having been found even to the southern limits of that island. They are also fairly common in the valleys of the Andes. Their presence in Tierra del Fuego, to which island the rhea, puma and Patagonian deer, Cartacus chilensis, have not gained access, is but an illustration of their superior powers of self-distribution. When hard-pressed they readily take to water, and when pursued by a pack of hounds have been known to take to the Gallegos River, at the place where the village now stands, where it has a width of three miles. With their well-known fearlessness of water, there is little wonder that they have been able to reach Tierra del Fuego, since the Magellan Strait, at both the first and second narrows, has a width of only two miles. They have a pecular habit, as remarked by Darwin, of dropping their dung in the same place, so that great accu- mulations of this are to be seen in piles scattered all over the plains. Some writers, more especially Hudson, have also claimed that the Guan- acos of any particular region all resorted to a particular spot to die. My observations in Patagonia did not verify sucha conclusion. _ It is true that I frequently observed a considerable number of Guanaco skeletons in the’ same immediate locality, but their presence in such places was easily ac- counted for. During the winter storms these animals would be driven from the surrounding plains to seek shelter in the river valleys and there, beneath embankments or clumps: of bushes, would be found the remains of such as, through old age or disease, were unable to survive the rigors of the storm they had sought to escape. The abundance of Guanaco skele- tons in such places is no more remarkable, and is, in fact, due to the same ae ALLEN: MAMMALIA: GLIRES. 23 circumstances that have caused the presence of several skeletons of domestic cattle or, in earlier days, of buffalo, in similar places all over our western plains.” (Hatcher, 7 c., pp. 266 and 271.) Mr. Prichard has also given recently a very full account of the Guanaco (4 ¢., pp. 253-287, and assim) adding many details of interest respecting its habits, and an account of the Indian and other methods of hunting it. Order GLIRES. Exclusive of the great family Muridze, only four genera of Rodents are represented in southern Patagonia, namely, Kerodon and Dolichotis (family Caviide), Véscaccia (family Chinchillidze), and Crenomys (family Octodontidz). The first three are each represented by a single species, but Cfewomys numbers at least four within the area here under consider- ation. They are all characteristic types of the pampas of Patagonia, Argentina, and southern Bolivia. Even northern Patagonia is quite beyond the range of Hares, Squirrels, Porcupines, and even of the large Rats of the genus /Vecfomys, and of the Spiny Rats so characteristic of southern Brazil and Paraguay. The abundance of Rodents is a striking feature of the Patagonian fauna. Mr. Barnum Brown, who spent several months in 1899 in Tierra del Fuego, and traversed large portions of the island in his geological explora- tions, says (MSS. notes) : “Rodents are very abundant, especially in the valleys and along the foot-hills where the entire earth over large areas is completely undermined. In the northern part of Tierra del Fuego it is difficult to ride through the campos on account of these burrows.”’ Mr. Hatcher refers to the great numbers of these animals on the upper Rio Chico. In connection with his notice of the Burrowing Owl and the Short-eared Owl (Narrative, p. 121) he says: “And indeed there seemed no limit to this source of their food supply, for not only was the surface of the ground literally covered in many places with the well-used trails of these small mammals, which crossed in every conceivable direction, but in many places the earth beneath the surface was honeycombed to the depth of a foot or more with their subterranean burrows, in such manner that our horses sank at each step half way to their knees and the wheels of our cart plowed great ruts in the surface of the ground.” 24 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Again, at the moraine near the junction of the Rio Belgrano with the Rio Chico, he says (Narrative, p. 123): ‘‘The side of the slope, as well as the little plain at its foot, was literally alive with rodents.” And then follows a more detailed account (pp. 124, 125) of the species observed, in which special reference is made to the Kerodon and the Tuco-tuco (Cfenomys), quoted in full under these species, and to various unidentified species of mice, as follows: ‘In the small brush which grew at the base and over the slopes of the bluff above our camp, there lived a variety of small rodents for the most part characterized by large, thin ears, delicate soft fur of a bluish brown color above and lighter on the belly, with tails of various length, which in some species might be described as short and in others much attenuated. “The tall grass which covered the river valley swarmed with myriads of small rodents somewhat larger than those just mentioned, with usually smaller ears, smaller tails, and a coarser pelage of an almost uniformly dull brown color. While these little animals were present in the greatest abundance they seemed all to pertain to one of two or three different species and exhibited very little variety of either form, size or color.”’ A heavy rainstorm made evident the fact that these little animals, especially the burrowing species, are quite an effective geological agent in producing erosion, and also that they suffer at times great destruction from the elements. On these points he says (p. 125): “On walking about the following morning I was much impressed, not only with the amount of erosion which had been effected by the storm, but with the great destruction to animal life of which it had been the cause. Proceeding along the foot of the bluff, I observed a number of dead bodies of the little Crexomys magellanica lying about upon the surface, and could only guess at the number of carcasses of these and other rodents that were buried beneath the débris, that during the night had been washed down from the bluff above and now lay at my feet, covering no inconsiderable portion of the surface of the valley to a depth varying from an inch to one or two feet. While the dead bodies of rodents belonging to other species were not wanting, the storm appeared to have been especially destructive to the little tuco-tuco, owing no doubt to the peculiar habit of that animal in burrowing so near the surface of the ground in search of food. When erosion on the surface had made an opening in the burrow at any point, a torrent of water would rush into the subterranean channel, either instantly ALLEN: MAMMALIA: CAVIIDA:. 25 drowning such of its inhabitants as were caught below, or driving them to seek refuge by escaping from the burrow where they were certain to meet with a similar death from the downpour of rain on the outside. As I walked about this morning considering the destruction wrought by the storm of the previous night, I was struck with the great importance of the work accomplished by rodents and other burrowing animals, when con- sidered as agents of erosion, and it appeared to me that this source of erosion had not been given sufficient attention in our text books of geology, when treating of the various erosive agents.” FamMiLty CAV//DA. KERODON AUSTRALIS (Is. Geoffroy). (Plate VII, Fig. 1, Skull.) Cavia australis Is. Geoffroy-St. Hilaire, Guérin’s Mag. de Zool., 1833, Cl. I, pl. xii, animal. Northern Patagonia.—D’ Orbigny, Voy. dans Amer. Mérid. Mamm., 26, pl. xviii, figs. 1-4. Thomas, P. Z. S., 1898, 211. Chubut, E. Patagonia. — Hatcher, Narrative Princeton Univ. Patagonian Exped., I, 1903, 123, habits. Cavia (Cerodon) australis Waterhouse, Mamm., II, 1848, 180, pl. iii, fig. 2, animal, pl. xvi, fig. 13, skull from below. Cavia | Aneoma| australis Burmeister, Descrip. phys. Rép. Argent., III, 1079; 272. Kerodon kingit Bennett, P. Z. S., 1835, 90, Port Desire, Patagonia. — Waterhouse, Zodl. Voy. Beagle, Mamm., 1839, 88. — Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., ii, 1897, 6309. Adult (March—May).— Above dark yellowish gray, finely varied with black; sides lighter, less varied with black-tipped hairs; ventral surface white with a slight yellowish tone, varied more or less with gray, through the showing more or less at the surface of the dull gray underfur ; sides of nose, a narrow eye ring, and the space between the eye and ear yellowish gray, or buffy white, with a postauricular patch of pale buff; ears thinly clothed, the very short hairs yellowish gray on both surfaces ; upper sur- face of feet pale yellowish gray, the toes lighter, clear pale buff; toe pads and callosities blackish. Young. —Scarcely at all different from the adults, and, like the adults, different specimens vary from yellowish white to mottled grayish white below. 26 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Adults vary individually in the amount of yellowish suffusion above, some being quite strongly yellowish, while others are dark gray with very little tinge of yellow. Measurements. — Eight adult and semiadult males measure as follows : Total length, 217.5 mm. (210-230); hind foot, 50 (49-52). Eight adult and semiadult females: Total length, 218.8 (210-230); hind foot, 48.5 (47- 52). The skulls show that few of the specimens of which the measure- ments are here given are full grown. No. 84180, a male, is the only very old individual, with the skull heavily ossified, in the series. This speci- men has a total length of 230, and the length of the hind foot is 52. The skull of this specimen measures: Total length, 54; zygomatic breadth, 32; interorbital breadth, 10.5; greatest width of brain case, 25; mastoid breadth, 22; length of nasals, 19; palatal length, 24; palatal foramina, 7.4; diastema, 13; upper molar series, 13.5 ; lower jaw, length from inner base of incisors to posterior border of condyle, 36; do., to end of angular process, 42; height at condyle, 14; lower molar series, 13.5. The next oldest skull is that of a female, No. 84182, which has the same external measurements as the male, namely, total length, 230, hind foot, 52. The skull, however, is considerably smaller, measuring as fol- lows: Total length, 47; zygomatic breadth, 29; least interorbital breadth, 10; greatest width of brain case, 21; mastoid breadth, 15; palatal length, 20; palatal foramina, 5.3 ; diastema, 10.8 ; upper molar series, 11.2; lower jaw, length from inner base of incisors to posterior border of condyle, 31 ; do., to end of angular process, 35; height at condyle, 12; lower molar Series se 11,3 ; Represented by 29 specimens, of which 20 were collected by Mr. Col- burn near Swan Lake and the Basaltic Cafions, in March and April, and the remaining 9 by Mr. Peterson, on the upper Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, in the valley close to the river, near the Cordilleras, during the month of February. Thus the pelage of only one season is represented. This animal evidently continues to increase in size for a long period. Of the 29 specimens in the present collection only one or two, or at most three, appear to have reached fully adult conditions, and these do not show indications of oldage. In thisrespect they resemble the Geomyidz among North American Rodents, and the Dide/phis group among Marsupials. Charles Darwin’s notes on the habits and distribution of this animal, as published by Waterhouse in ‘“‘ Zodlogy of the Voyage of the Beagle,” are ey ALLEN: MAMMALIA: CAVIIDA. 27 still worth quoting, and constitute nearly all that has been heretofore pub- lished on the subject. He says: ‘The Kerodon is common at intervals along the coast of Patagonia, from the Rio Negro (Lat. 41°) to the Strait of Magellan. It is very tame, and commonly feeds by day ; it is said to bring forth two young ones at a birth. At the Rio Negro it frequents in great numbers the bottoms of old hedges ; at Port Desire it lives beneath the ruins of the old Spanish buildings. One old male killed there weighed 3530 grains. At the Strait of Magellan, I have seen amongst the Pata- gonian Indians, cloaks for small children made with the skins of this little animal ; and the Jesuit Falkner says, that the people of one of the southern tribes, take their name from the number of these animals which inhabit their country. The Spaniards and half-civilized Indians, call the Kerodon, ‘conejos,’ or rabbit ; and thus the mistake has arisen, that rabbits are found in the neighborhood of the Strait of Magellan.’ — Darwin, Voyage of the Beagle, Mamm., pp. 88, 89. Mr. Durnford (ci Thomas, Z c., p. 212), writes of its presence at Chubut, as follow: ‘ Extremely abundant, and found in every clump of brush- wood throughout the neighborhood. This little animal is very good eating. It sits up like a rabbit on its hind-quarters while chewing the mouthful it has just taken.”’ Mr. Hatcher (Narrative, p. 123) refers to their abundance at the junction of the Rio Belgrano and Rio Chico as follows: “ Hopping about among the bushes and rocks were to be seen in great numbers representatives of the little gray, tailless and hare-like Cavéa australis. Most interesting and amusing little creatures they are, as, always alert and intent on detecting the first approach of danger, they hop about from one position to another, or sit erect on their haunches and nibble unceasingly at a fragment of plantain leaf, or other morsel of food held conveniently in the fore paws. The favorite haunts of these little animals are shallow burrows about the bases of the larger bushes, or beneath certain herbaceous plants like Bolax glabaria, that grow in broad, dense, caespitose masses upon the surface of the ground.” This little animal thus appears to be abundant over a wide extent of territory, in the foothills of the eastern base of the Andes as well as along the coast, and probably at all favorable localities throughout the interven- ing districts. 28 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS : ZOOLOGY. : Genus DOLICHOTIS Desmarest. Dotchotis Desmarest, Journ. Phys., LXXXVIII, 1819, 205 ; Mamm., II, 1822, 359, 360, footnote. Type Dasyprocta patachonica Desmarest = Cavia patachonica Shaw = Cavia magellanica Kerr (1792). Mara Lesson, Cent. Zool., 1832, 113. Type, Cava patachonica Shaw. DOLICHOTIS MAGELLANICA (Kerr). Hare Narborough, Voyage to Magellan, 1694, 33; also 1711, 33. Patagonian Cavy Pennant, Hist. Quad., II, 1781, 363, pl. xxxix; 2d ed., II, 1793, 91, pl. xci. Based on Narborough’s account and specimens. Port Desire, Patagonia. Cavia magellanica Kerr, An. King, 1792, No. 454. Dolichotis magellanica Thomas, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. (5), IV, 1879, 397. Revival of Kerr’s name. Mara magellanica Lesson, Cent. Zool., 1832, 113, pl. xlii. (Mara pata- gonica on the plate.) Cavia patachonica Shaw, Gen. Zodl., I, i, 1801, 226, pl. clxv. From Pennant and Narborough; plate from a specimen in Leverian Mu- seum, brought by Narborough from Patagonia. — Waterhouse, Zodl. Voy. Beagle, Mamm., II, 1839, 89. Chloromys patagonicus Desmoulins, Dict. class. d’Hist. Nat., IV, 1823, 47.— Lesson, Man. de Mamm., 1827, 301. Mara patagonica Lesson, Cent. Teal 1830, pl. xlii. Dasyprocta patachonica Desmarest, ieee de Phys., LXXXVIII, 1819, 205; Mamm., pt. 11, 1822, 358. Dolichotis ee Waterhouse, Nat. Hist. Mamm., II, 1848, 158, pl. iti, fig. 1, animal, pl. rv, fig. i, skull. — Cassin, U. S. Expl. Exp. (Wilkes), Mamm. and Orn., 1858, 22, Patagonia. Dasyprocta patagontum Schinz, Cuvier’s Thierreich, IV, 1825, 324. Chloromys patagonica Lesson, Mamm., 1827, 301. Dolichotis patagonica Wagner, Schreber’s Saug. Suppl., IV, 1844, 66. — Burmeister, Reise durch die La Plata-Staaten, II, 422, habits, external characters and anatomy; Desc. phys. Rep. Argent., III, 1879, 260. — Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., ii, 1897, 641.— Prichard, P. Z. S., 1902, I, 277; Through Heart of Patagonia, 1902, 67, 257, 258 (habits and distribution). ALLEN: MAMMALIA: CAVIIDA:. 29 General color above dark gray, passing into black on the lower back and rump, forming a large black patch which extends laterally to the loins ; thighs crossed by a broad band of white; ventral surface with a broad median band of yellowish white, occupying the middle of the throat, and the median ventral area from the posterior border of the pectoral region to the tail; pectoral and prepectoral areas dull ochraceous, which color also forms a broad lateral line from the cheeks to the loins, gradu- ally passing into the gray of the upper parts; ears gray, thinly haired, the tips fringed with long rusty brown hairs, and the anterior base fulvous, joining a broad postocular patch of ochraceous brown: a narrow yellowish brown eye-ring, the lids and the long eyelashes black, as are also the whiskers ; front and sides of nose pale yellowish; fore limbs externally gray, varied with black, passing into black on the feet; inside of fore limbs ochraceous buff; hind limbs pale yellowish gray proximally, passing first into fawn, and then into yellowish gray on the proximal half of the tarsus, mixed with black on the apical portion, and the toes black ; inner surface of hind limbs pale fulvous ; toe pads and tarsal callosity black; rest of under surface of hind feet heavily clothed with rusty fulvous hairs. There are no flesh measurements but a well made skin gives the fol- lowing : Total length, 620mm.; tail, 12; hind foot, 143; ear from notch, 63. The Patagonian Cavy is represented by a single specimen (skin and the complete skeleton), collected by Mr. J. B. Hatcher at the mouth of the Rio Chico, February 10, 1899. He makes, however, no reference to the species in his “Narrative.” This locality appears to form its known southern limit of distribution. It is an animal of the arid plains, and its habits have been well described by Darwin and later writers. It lives in burrows, but feeds and roams about by day, wandering, according to Darwin, miles from its burrow, in little parties of two and three, and is shy and watchful. It brings forth two young at a birth, which are produced within the burrow. Its range appears to extend from about latitude 30° to latitude 50° south, wherever the country is favorable to its needs. The Patagonian Cavy was first formally made known by Pennant in 1781, from a specimen in the Leverian Museum collected by Sir John Narborough near Port Desire, in Patagonia. Sir John refers to it as a “Hare” and says: “. . . they are shaped like English hares, and much larger, and instead of a tail have a little stub about an inch long, without hair on it; they have holes in the ground like Coneys.”’ 30 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Mr. Prichard says it is ‘called ‘cavy’ or ‘hare’ indiscriminately by the English residents ; “edve by the Argentines and Chilians; Jaahz by the Tehuelches.” Although Mr. Hatcher obtained a specimen at the mouth of the Rio Chico, Mr. Prichard gives the Rio Deseado as the “southern limit of the distribution of the Patagonian Cavy,”’ and adds: ‘As far as my experience goes, I never observed a cavy after October 23, upon which day I counted fourteen upon the pampa between Lake Musters and the settlement of Colohuapi. The residents of Colohuapi informed me that the place formed the southern limit of the distribution of the cavy. It is, of course, impossible to lay down an exact line, but I think it safe to say that the range of the cavy does not extend south of the 46th parallel. This limit is the more remarkable inasmuch as the country south of latitude 46° does not in any way materially differ from that over which the cavy is commonly to be met with. One most often finds these animals on patches of dry mud. They are comparatively easy to stalk, as easy as an English rabbit. The best method of shooting them is, of course, with the rifle, though occasionally you may start them from a thicket and shoot them as you would an English hare with a shot-gun. They generally weigh between 18 pounds and 25 pounds, though I heard of one which I was assured weighed 31 pounds.” (ZL. c¢., p. 257.) Dolichotts magellanica ranges northward into southern Argentina, and is replaced in the Province of Cordova, central Argentina, by a northern subspecies Dolichotis magellanica centricola Thomas, where it occurs with the much smaller D. sa/znzco/a Burmeister. Family CH/NCH/LLIDA:. The Viscacha of Paraguay and Argentina is the only member of the family Chinchillidaze known to occur in Patagonia, where it is apparently not found to the southward of the Rio Negro, and thus hardly calls for extended notice in the present connection. The genera Chznchilla and Lagidium are restricted to the Andean region, mainly of Peru and Chili. Genus VISCACCIA Oken. Viscacia Rafinesque, Anal. de la Nature, 1815, 56. Nomen nudum. Viscaccia Oken, Lehrb. d. Naturg., III, 1816, 835. Type, Lepus chilensis *) ALLEN: MAMMALIA : CHINCHILLIDA. 31 Oken = Difus maximus Desmarest (ex Blainville). Cf Allen, Proc. BiolS0e "Washi XV; 1902, 196. Viscaccia Schinz, Cuvier’s Thierreich, IV, 1825, 429. Type, Vescaccia americana Schinz, sp. nov. = Dipus maximus Desmarest (ex Blain- ville), 1817. © Thomas, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, 25, April 2, 1901; Allen, zé¢@., 181, Dec. 12, 1QOl. Vizcacia Schinz, Naturg. und Abbild. der Saug., 1824-1828, 244 (circa 1826). Also 2d ed., 1827= Véscaccia Schinz, 1825. — Lahille, Congr. Cien. Lat. Amer., III, 1899, 192. Cf. Palmer, Science (2), Wit No.2 ren 21.23. July 2, 1897. ° Viscacia Rengger, Naturg. der Saug. Paraguay, 1830, 272, footnote. = Viscaccta Schinz, 1825 (= Viscaccia Oken, 1816). Lagostomus Brookes, Trans. Linn. Soc. London, XVI, pt. 1, 1829, roz. Type, Lagostomus trichodactylus, sp. nov. = Dipus maximus Des- marest, 1817. As shown by the above synonymy and references, the proper generic name of the Argentine Viscacha has been the subject of considerable dis- cussion ; and while Schinz in 1825 adopted for it the name /7scaccéa, the Same name appears to have been used for it nine years earlier by Oken, both uses of the name having the same basis, namely “la Vizcache”’ of Azara. Later Schinz varied the form of the name to /7zcacia. As stated by me in 1go1, the case is as follows: As has been fully shown,' there is no doubt of the pertinence of the generic name Vzscaccia Schinz, 1825, to ‘la Vizcache”’ of Azara, the Argentine Viscacha. But it turns out that Oken (Lehrb. d. Naturg., Theil III, Abth. 2, p. 835, 1816) used the same term in 1816, in nearly the same sense. Oken included in his group or subgenus /7Zscaccza only two species: (1) Lepus chilensis and (2) Mus laniger. The first, notwithstanding the name c/z/ensis, is based, as far as the description is concerned, wholly on “la Vizcache”’ of Azara, while in his diagnosis of the group /7scaccéa he says ‘‘Zehen vorn 4, hin- ten 3,’’ which would exclude his second species, the AZus daniger of Molina, and hence the Chinchilla of Peru. As Bennett, in 1829, made the Chin- chilla the type of his genus C/znchilla, the Argentine Viscacha becomes by restriction the type and only species of Oken’s Vscaccia, the authority for which name is thus Oken (1816) instead of Schinz (1825). "@. Palmer, Science, N. S., VI, p. 21, July 2, 1897; Thomas, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIV, p. 25, April 2, rg01 ; Allen, zé7d., p. 181, Dec. 2, 1901. 32 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. VISCACCIA CHILENSIS (Oken). Vizcache Azara, Hist. Nat. Quad. Paraguay, I], 1801, 41. Not ‘La Viscaccia, Lepus viscacia,’ Molina, 1782; nor Vizcacia viscacica Rehn, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XIII, 1900, 167; nor V7zcacia viscacia Allen, zbz@., XIV, 1901, 91. [Vescaccia| Lepus chilensis Oken, Lehrb. d. Naturg., III, ii, 1816, 835. Based on the Vizcache of Azara, as above. Viscaccta chilensts Allen, Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV, Oct. 10, 1902, 196 (ex Oken). Dipus maximus Desmarest (ex Blainville), Nouv. Dict. d’ Hist. Nat., XIII, 1817, 117; Mamm., II, 1822, 212. Based on a living specimen seen in London, which specimen later became the basis of Lagostomus trichodactylus Brookes. ; Vizcacia maxima Palmer, Science (2), VI, 1897, 21; Lahille, Congr. Cien. Lat. Amer., III, 1899, 192. Viscacia maxima Berg, Com. Mus. nac. Buenos Aires, I, 1900, 220. Viscaccia americana Schinz, Cuvier’s Thierreich, IV, 1825, 429. Vizcacia pamparum Schinz, Naturg. und Abbild. Saug., 1824-1828, 244 (cerca 1826). Lagostomus trichodactylus Brookes, Trans. Linn. Soc. London, XVI, 1829, 95, pl. ix (= Dipus maximus Desm. 1817, having been based on the same specimen).— Wagner, Schreber’s Saug. Suppl., III, 1843, 310. — Waterhouse, Mamm., II, 1848, 212. — Hudson, P. Z.S., 1872, 822, 833, habits.— Burmeister, Descrip. phys. Rép. Argent., Pi, 9670, 247: Callomys viscacia D’Orbigny & Is. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, Ann. des Sci. nat., XXI, 1830, 291, habits and distribution (=Dpjus maximus Desm.; not Lefus viscacta Molina). Lagostomus viscacha Meyen, Nova Acta Acad. Leopold.-Czs., XVI, 1833 (1834), 584. For many years the Argentine Viscache was currently known under the specific name ¢v7chodactylus (Lagostomus trichodactylus Brookes, 1829), but it was later found that Dzpus maximus Desmarest (ex Blainville), 1817, referred to the same animal, and received acceptance as its proper specific name. But it unfortunately happens that Oken’s name chz/enszs (Lepus chilensts Oken, 1816) has one year’s priority over maximus of ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OCTODONTID#. 33 Desmarest, both names having practically the same basis, namely, the Vizcacha of Azara. As I have elsewhere shown,' the Argentine Viscacha must apparently be called Vrscaccza chilensis Oken. This species is unrepresented in the present collection, its range not extending below the Rio Negro (latitude 41° south), and it thus barely reaches the northern border of the region here considered. It has been so fully described and figured by Brookes, Waterhouse and others, that a detailed account of it seems uncalled for in the present con- nection. An extended notice of its habits has been given by Darwin, and later by Hudson, as observed by them on the pampas of Buenos Aires. Family OCTODONTID:. Of the Octodonts only the Octodontinze reach Patagonia, and of the five commonly recognized existing genera of this subfamily only one, Ctfenomys, appears to have been found east of the southern Andes. The other four — Acounemys, Spalacopus, Abrocoma and Octodon — occur within or on the western slope of the Andes, and are not, as now known, numerously represented in species. Cfenomys, on the other hand, is characteristic of the plains and pampas, ranging from Tierra del Fuego northward to southern Brazil and Bolivia, and westward into the base of the Andes. It isa plastic and prolific group, swarming in favorable locali- ties, and readily susceptible to changes of environment. At least some twenty-five named forms are at present tentatively recognized, mostly on rather slight differences of size or color. Although the extreme phases are widely separated, it is probable that so many links still remain in the chain of intergradation that when the group comes to be more effectually known many of the forms now treated as species will be found to merge, and that some of the names stand for very little that is tangible. Sev- eral extinct forms have also been distinguished, the group extending back into the Pleistocene, and according to some authorities to the Pliocene. The family Octodontide, as at present constituted, forms a very hetero- geneous assemblage, comprising groups that might well be assigned to three distinct families. There is, for example, no close relationship be- tween the Octodonu-Crenomys series and the Spiny Rats (Loucheres-Echimys series), or of either of these with Crenodactylus. At different times each 1 Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., XV., 196, Oct. 10, 1902. 34 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. of these groups has been assigned, by different authors, the rank of a family, which disposition of them seems fairly to represent their real de- gree of affinity. We would thus have the comprehensive group Octo- dontidze separated into (1) the true Octodonts, or Octodontidz proper ; (2) the Spiny Rats and their immediate allies, or Echimyidz; (3) Cfeno- dactylus and allied genera, or Ctenodactylidz. They are severally quite as distinct as are the commonly recognized families Heteromyidz and Geomyide. Genus CTENOMYS Blainville. Crenomys Blainville, Bull. Soc. Philomat., Paris, April, 1826, 64, pl.; Ann. Sci. Nat., IX, 1826, 102. Type, Crenomys brasiliensis sp. nov., Minas Geraes, Brazil. The Tuco-tucos, as the species of Cfexomys are known locally, repre- sent, through closely similar adaptive modifications, in South America the Pocket Gophers (Geomyidz) of North America. Both are modified for an almost exclusive life underground, having the same form of body, fos- sorial feet, degenerate organs of sight and hearing, and the same soft, silky pelage. The Tuco-tucos lack the external cheek-pouches of the Pocket Gophers, and differ from them in certain important cranial charac- ters, although the general form of the skull and the structure of the teeth are similar in both. The form of the zygoma and the position and form of the infraorbital foramen are, however, notably different — features that perhaps warrant their wide dissociation as members respectively of the Hystricomorphs and Myomorphs. The Tuco-tucos, as already said, are exceedingly prolific, in local forms as well as in individuals, and in favorable localities, as in alluvial or moist soils, their burrows fairly honeycomb the earth over considerable areas, rendering traveling, on foot or with horses, more or less difficult and even dangerous. CTENOMYS MAGELLANICUS Bennett. Ctenomys magellanicus Bennett, P. Z. S., 1835, 190. Port Gregory, Strait of Magellan; Trans. Zo6l. Soc. Lond., II, 1841, 84, pl. xvii, animal and skull; same specimen. — Waterhouse, Mamm., II, 1848, 283, pl. viii, skull, pl. ix, fig. 2, animal. Based wholly on Bennett's type specimen. — Burmeister, Descrip. phys. Rép. Argent., III, 1879, 239, ex Bennett and Waterhouse. — Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., ii, 1897, ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OCTODONTID. 35 599, part; only the references to Bennett and Waterhouse. — Thomas, P. Z. S., 1898, 211. Tombo Point, on the coast 60 miles south of mouth of Rio Chubut.—Lahille, Congr. Cien. Lat. Amer., III, 1899, 190. Crenomys neglectus Nehring, Zoolog. Anz., XXIII, Oct. 8, 1900, 535, fig. 1, skull. Based on a weathered skull from Patagonia. Waterhouse’s description and measurements of the type (¢ c.) and then only known specimen of this species, being more concise and explicit than Bennett's, are here presented: ‘‘General tint of the fur ashy grey, faintly suffused with yellow, and on the back brownish ; abdomen pale ochreous yellow; tail very pale brown: the fur is moderately long, very soft, and of a deep slate grey colour at the root. “Inhabits Port Gregory [=Cape Gregory of Bennett and of modern maps |, Strait of Magalhaen. Inches. Lines, [mm.] “ Length from tip of nose to root of tail.... 8 fo) [203 ] eenpth, Ofptatlen. 2220 Joc.c 5st eres 2 6 [63.5] Length of fore foot and nails ........... 104 [22.1] Length ‘of longest nail. ..% 2 ase a 22 [6:7] Length of hind foot and nails........... I 34 esaeaih. A nearly complete skull, and several others more or less incomplete (all weathered skulls — Nos. 23410-23413, U. S. Nat. Mus.), collected by Mr. Charles H. Townsend near Punta Arenas, Patagonia, during the cruise of the 4/éatross in 1887-1888, undoubtedly represent this species, to which I also refer a single specimen (No. 17444, Am. Mus.), skin and skull, and an additional younger skull (No. 17445, Am. Mus.) collected by Mr. Barnum Brown ‘30 miles south of the Port of Santa Cruz, on the coast” of Patagonia, and by him presented to the American Museum of Natural History. They agree well with Bennett’s and Waterhouse’s de- scriptions, and the younger skull agrees with their figure of the skull of the type, even in size. The other, a much older skull, is considerably larger. Mr. Brown’s specimens came from about 150 miles north of the type locality and appear to be strictly referable to this species, which differs from the form inhabiting the Cordilleras at the head of the Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, presently to be described, in its very much paler colors, both above and below, but appears not to be distinguishable in cranial charac- ters. It is a pale form, like the later described Crenomys fueginus Philippi from Tierra del Fuego. 36 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. The original basis of Crenomys magellanicus was a single specimen col- lected by Captain King at Cape (or Port) Gregory, on the northern side of the Strait of Magellan, and hence on the mainland of Patagonia. This specimen was considered by King to be “rather a young one,” .‘‘ from the size of the jaw, as compared with the abundant remains of this little animal which are scattered over the surface of the ground” (Trans. Zodl. Soc. Lond., II, 1841, p. 85); and the skull, as figured by Bennett and Waterhouse, seems to bear out this conclusion, all of the sutures being shown to be very distinct, as in a young animal. As late as 1848, Waterhouse stated (Mamm., II, p. 283) that, so far as he knew, but one specimen of this species of C/exomys had been brought to Europe; and to this day little has been added to our knowledge of its range or habits beyond the three or four lines respecting the latter con- tributed by Captain King, namely: “The little animal is very timid; feeds upon grass, and is eaten by the Patagonian Indians. It dwells in holes, which it burrows, in the ground: and, from the number of holes, it would appear to be very abundant. It inhabits the east entrance of the Strait of Magelhaens at Cape Gregory and the vicinity.” In comparing this species with the other species of the genus then known, Waterhouse assumed that its small size was not due to immaturity, ‘‘all the teeth being fully developed.” As shown, however, by the large series of an allied species in the present collection, the skull more than doubles in size (in bulk, not in linear dimensions) after ‘‘the teethare fully developed” ; and furthermore, that his specimen was really quite young, and probably also a female, as indicated by the straightness of the zygo- matic arches. In this connection, as bearing upon the comment on Crenomys neglectus which here follows, it is worth while to note the unlikeness of Bennett’s and Waterhouse’s figures of the same skull, especially in respect to the position and direction of the fronto-parietal sutures, which are correctly drawn in Bennett's figure, and very erroneously represented in that pub- lished by Waterhouse. In 1900 Dr. Nehring published (2 c.) as new a Crenomys neglectus based on a Patagonian weathered skull, of which he gives a figure. He com- pares this skull with Bennett’s figure of the skull of C. mage//anicus, and is able to distinguish numerous differences between them, which appear to him weighty enough to warrant his treating this skull as the basis of a ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OCTODONTID. Sy new species. His most important character is the presence of a deep, longitudinal sulcus on the upper side of the jugal. It is true that this is not shown in Bennett's figure, which is only slightly shaded, being mainly in outline; but I find this same sulcus is present, in a more or less marked manner, according to the age and sex of the animal, in all of my large series of the genus Crfenomys from Patagonia, which includes over fifty skulls, representing several more or less closely related forms. I have, therefore, no hesitation in regarding Nehring’s C. weglectus as based on an adult female skull of one of the larger Patagonian species, in all probability C. magelanicus, although no definite locality is given for the specimen. CTENOMYS FUEGINUS Philippi. Crenomys fueginus Philippi, Arch. f. Naturg., 1880, i, 276, pl. xiii, skull. Tierra del Fuego. — Lahille, Congr. Cien. Lat. Amer., III, 1899, 190. Above mixed yellow and gray varied with black, the basal two thirds of the pelage blackish, with a subterminal band of white or light yellow, and the tips black ; ventral surface white, the basal half of the pelage black and the apical half white ; tail well clothed with soft hairs, above blackish, especially towards the tip, below clear yellowish white. Measurements. — Head and body, 227 mm.; tail, 46 (= total length, 273) ; fore foot to end of claws, 26; longest fore claw, 10; hind foot, 35% longest hind claw, 6. Skull: total length, 49; zygomatic breadth, 28.5; mastoid breadth, 26. (Based on Philippi, Z c.) This species was founded on specimens collected by Lieutenant Serrano of the Chilian Navy in the summer of 1878-79, on “der éstlichen Insel des Feuerlandes,” and was described and the skull figured by Professor Philippi in 1880 (2 c.). In general appearance he found it not very different from the other species of the genus ; his comparison of it, however, with C magellanicus was made, in the absence of specimens, with Waterhouse’s description and figure. He found the dimensions of the skull somewhat larger in C. fue- gimus than in C. magellanicus, and the zygoma outwardly more convex, as shown by his comparative figures of the skulls of the two species (4. ¢., pl. xili). But these differences are not necessarily important, since they are found in allied species to characterize the two sexes of the same species. Other codrdinated differences are noted, so that he felt fully warranted in treating the Tierra del Fuego animal as distinct. 38 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. His description of the color of C. fwegznus indicates a pale, ashy gray animal very different from that inhabiting the Cordilleras, but quite similar to C. magellanicus, the type locality of which is Cape Gregory, on the northern side of the Strait of Magellan. In view of its insular habitat, and in the absence of proper material for comparison, it seems best to give the species provisional recognition. CTENOMYS ROBUSTUS Allen. (Plate VII, Figs. 2 and 3, Skull.) Crenomys vobustus Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, 185, May 9, 1903. Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, near the Cordilleras, Patagonia. Pelage soft, short, somewhat lustrous. Above deep yellowish brown, varied with blackish, the hairs being dark slaty plumbeous for the basal two thirds, with a subterminal band of dark rusty yellow, and a very short black tip, with longer blackish-tipped hairs sparsely intermixed ; below deep brownish ochraceous; ears dusky brown, barely projecting above the fur; upper surface of fore and hind feet dingy yellowish gray ; tail well clothed with fine soft hairs, forming a slight pencil at the tip, yellowish gray, dusky at the tip above. Other specimens vary from the above in being a little lighter or a little darker, both above and below. Tail variable in color, often wholly without any dusky median line above or any dusky tip; generally there is a very narrow median dusky line, extending from the tip anteriorly for a part or the whole of the length of the tail; in a few specimens it is strongly developed, broadens and increases in blackness towards the tip, and in rare cases the whole tip is black, with a short black stripe on the lower surface of the apical fourth or third of the tail. Young examples differ from the adults in the general tint being duller and the pelage less lustrous. Measurements. — Type: Total length, 290 mm. ; tail vertebrze, 73; hind foot, 40. Nine adult males measure as follows: Total length, 303.5 (290— 322; only one above 310, and only two above 298); tail vertebrae, 81.5 (73-88) ; hind foot, 40.5 (40-42). Five adult females; Total length, 275 (256-300; only one above 280) ; tail vertebrae, 75 (70-80); hind foot, 37 (35-40). Skull, type: Total length, 52.5; basal length, 47; zygomatic breadth, 30; interorbital breadth, 10; mastoid breadth, 29.5; length of nasals, 20; ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OCTODONTIDA. 39 palatal length, 25; diastema, 16; upper molar series, 9.6; lower jaw, inner base of incisors to posterior border of condyle, 33; inner base of incisors to tip of angular process, 41; height at condyle, 16; lower molar series, 10.3; distance between condyles, 18; distance between tips of angular processes, 37. Ten adult male skulls: Total length, 53.6 (51-55); zygo- matic breadth, 30.5 (29-33). Five adult female skulls: Total length, 48 (46-50); zygomatic breadth, 27.5 (26.2-28.6). The mastoid breadth is practically the same as the zygomatic breadth, varying in different speci- mens from slightly more to slightly less. The greater part of the skulls in the present series are middle-aged, with all the sutures distinct; only two or three give evidence of being very old. Represented by 23 specimens, all from the upper Rio Chico, Cordilleras, and all collected by Mr. Peterson, February 7 to 28, and one March6. All but three are in adult pelage, and these have nearly acquired it, only the lower part of the back and rump retaining the pelage characteristic of immaturity. The general color above of the adults varies from strong yellowish brown to slightly rufescent brown, and below from deep ochra- ceous buff to brownish ochraceous. The color of the tail is very variable, as already noted ; except in the case of a few which have the tail practically uniform yellowish gray, no two have the tail colored alike, in respect to the median dorsal line, which varies from a slight trace of dusky to a well defined blackish median stripe, the black widening and increasing in intensity apically; in three specimens the whole tip of the tail is black, including the under surface,*two of which are males and the other a female. A few other specimens approach this condition. As shown by the measurements already given, the females are very much smaller than the males. The skull is very variable in respect to size and many details of struc- ture, but especially in the size and form of the interparietal. In one specimen it is almost obsolete, forming a mere line less than a millimeter in antero-posterior extent and 5 mm. in transverse extent. Generally it is subtriangular, with a transverse width of 5~7 mm., and an antero-pos- terior length of 2-4 mm. It is sometimes divided medially into two halves. On each side of the interparietal, and separated from it by the pos- terior extension of the parietals, is an intercalated bone of variable size and of an irregularly oval front outline, each generally considerably larger in area than the interparietal. 40 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Crenomys vobustus differs markedly in coloration from C. mage/lanicus, but not very appreciably, so far as specimens of the latter are available for comparison, in size or cranial characters. C. mage/lanicus is pale yel- lowish gray, or ash gray with a fulvous tinge, while C. vobustus is dark yellowish brown. C. d0/7vzenszs is very much larger and very much darker and redder, having ‘‘the general hue bright rufous brown,” and the upper surface of the nose, head, and nape blackish. It appears to have no close relationship to any of the described species of Cfenxomeys. It was met with only in the alluvial river valley of the upper Rio Chico, at the eastern base of the Andes. Mr. Peterson says of this spe- cies: ‘‘Very abundant, especially along streams. The ground they occupy is all undermined with their passages, which cross one another in all directions. They are seldom seen on the surface and are difficult to trap.” (MSS. notes.) Most of the specimens of this species appear to have been taken in Mayer Basin, at the edge of the Cordilleras, since in writing of this region Mr. Hatcher refers incidentally to Mr. Peterson's obtaining here a splendid collection of rodents, ‘‘including a fine series of a much larger species of Cfewomys than any we had seen in the plains region”’ (Narrative, p. 138). CTENOMYS SERICEUS Allen. (Plate VIII, Figs. 1 and 2, Skull.) Ctenomys sericeus Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, 187. May 9, 1903. Upper Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, near the Cordilleras, Pata- gonia. Crenomys magellanica Hatcher, Princeton University Exped. Patagonia, I, Narrative, 1903, 124. Not of Bennett. Pelage short, soft, silky and lustrous. General color above yellowish gray strongly varied with black, the hairs being slaty plumbeous for the basal three fourths, then banded narrowly with pale yellowish brown and tipped with black ; flanks and ventral surface buff; sides of nose yel- . lowish brown; top of nose and top of head like median dorsal region, which is darker than the sides; ears very small, blackish ; upper surface of feet dingy gray with a slight yellowish cast; tail pale yellowish, with a median dusky stripe along the apical half of the upper surface. In some specimens there is a tendency to a well-marked darker median dorsal band, extending from the nose to the base of the tail. Several of the specimens are a little darker than the type above described. The tail ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OCTODONTID&. 4I stripe varies in distinctness from nearly obsolete to a broad, well-defined black band running the whole length of the tail. Young in first pelage are grayer with less fulvous, and the pelage is _ longer, softer, and less firm. Measurements.— Type: Total length, 208 mm.; tail vertebrae, 62; hind foot, 28. Five adult males: Total length, 200 (195-208) ; tail vertebrz, 56.6 (51-62); hind foot, 26.2 (25-28). A single adult female measures : Total length, 210; tail vertebrz, 60; hind foot, 27. Skull, type: Total length, 39; basal length, 35.2; zygomatic breadth, 24; mastoid breadth, 23.5; interorbital breadth, 7; length of nasals, 13; palatal length, 17; diastema, 10; upper molar series, 7.5; lower jaw, inner base of incisors to posterior border of condyle, 26; inner base of incisors to end of angular process, 29.5; height at condyle, 7; width between condyles, 15.3; width between tips of angular processes 25.6; lower molar series, 8. Four adult male skulls: Total length, 36.4 (34.3-39) ; zygomatic breadth, 21.5 (20-23.6). An old female skull measures, total length, 36; zygomatic breadth, 20. In several of the skulls the interparietal is entirely absent, and when present is very small. The lateral intercalated bones are present, and are as variable in form as already described in Crexomys robustus. Represented by 11 specimens, collected by Mr. Peterson in the Cordil- leras of the upper Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, in the valley close to the river, Jan. 31 to Feb. 7, 1897. Six are adults and five are young, partly in the juvenile pelage. This species considerably exceeds in size Crenomys pundti Nehring, and differs from it very markedly in coloration. The total length of the skull of C. pundit is given as 31.3 mm., and the zygomatic breadth as 19.5; the same for C. sevtcews (average specimens) being, respectively, 39 and 21.5 mm. While it agrees practically in size with C. devg7 Thomas, from _ the central part of the Province of Cordova, it differs from it in color, being very much darker throughout. Crenomys serviceus occurs with the very much larger and very differently colored C. vobustus, as both were collected on the same days and at the same localities by Mr. Peterson. He says of this species: ‘Burrows extensively in the ground, leaving piles of dirt at the surface like pocket gophers (Geomyidz). They make a drumming noise while sitting in the mouth of the burrows.” (MSS. notes.) 42 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Mr. Hatcher gives a somewhat extended account of the Tuco-tuco, which apparently refers mainly to the present species. The locality is the vicinity of the junction of the Rio Belgrano with the Rio Chico. He says (Narra- five; pp. 124, 125) : ‘All about us, and indeed at times from immediately beneath our feet, could be heard the deep, subterranean drummings of the little tuco-tuco, Crenomys magellanica, as engaged with commendable industry, he drove his little tunnel just beneath the surface, ever onward in search of those nutritious roots and succulent tubers upon which he feeds. These little -fossorial rodents seemed especially active in the early morning and late afternoon and evening, During these hours, in localities especially favor- able to them, they would be constantly heard, though a careful watch throughout our stay in Patagonia, kept at frequent intervals in order to observe their habits above ground, was only rewarded by a momentary glimpse, on one or two occasions, of a solitary individual, as he appeared for an instant at the mouth of a burrow. On one occasion, however, while walking rapidly along, I came suddenly upon one of these little animals in the grass at a distance of several feet from the mouth of his burrow: The manner in which he ran aimlessly about in search of his hole, with the nose close to the surface of the ground, seemed to indicate, not only that he had lost his way and become bewildered by the grass, which, to him, had all the appearances of a great forest, but that he depended quite as much, if not more, upon his sense of smell as that of sight, while endeavoring to regain the abandoned burrow. Hardly had he entered the latter when the frightened condition under which he had been so evidently laboring while above ground, suddenly and completely disap- peared, and he stopped long enough to send back a rapid volley of deep, guttural notes, uttered in defiance at the intruder, who, far from having cherished any sinister designs against the little creature, had only been delighted with this opportunity, brief though it was, of observing him above . ground. The entire attitude of the little animal was such as to convince me that his surroundings while above ground, aside from my presence, were distinctly uncongenial, and that he was in every respect especially modified and adapted for a subterranean life, a conclusion which I had previously reached upon observing the small eyes, powerful fore-limbs, and feet well adapted for burrowing, and other anatomical characters common to animals of more or less subterranean habits.”’ ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OCTODONTIDA. 43 CTENOMYS COLBURNI Allen. (Plate VIII, Figs. 3 and 4, Skull.) Ctenomys colburni Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, 188, May 9, 1903. Arroyo Aike, in the Basalt Cafions, fifty miles southeast of Lake Buenos Aires, Patagonia. Similar to C. sericeus but larger, much more strongly suffused with fulvous and less varied with black. Measurements. — Type: Total length, 230 mm.; tail vertebrae, 65; hind foot, 29. Fifteen males measure as follows: Total length 224.5 (210— 240, with one at 245 and one at 250); tail vertebrae, 69 (60-75, with two at 80); hind foot, 30 (28-32, and one at 33). Seventeen females: Total length, 213 (200-225); tail vertebrae, 62.2 (60-65); hind foot, 29.5 (29-31). | Skull. — Type, total length, 43; basal length, 39; zygomatic breadth, 25; mastoid breadth, 25; interorbital breadth, 8.5; length of nasals, 14.3; palatal length, 20; diastema, 6; upper molar teeth, 8; lower jaw, inner base of incisors to posterior border of condyles, 28.5; inner base of incisors to point of angular process, 33.5; height at condyle, 8; width between condyles, 16; width between points of angular processes, 27 ; lower molar teeth, 8.5. Seven old male skulls measure: Total length, 43 (41-45); zygomatic breadth, 24.3 (23.5-25.3) Fifteen old female skulls: Total length, 38 (36-41); zygomatic breadth, 22.2 (21-24). Represented by 33 specimens—16 males and 17 females—all adult except 3, and all collected by Mr. Colburn, of which 16 were taken in the basalt cafions, fifty miles southeast of Lake Buenos Aires, April 2 to 26, and the remaining 17 at Swan Lake, April 2 to May 17. Aside from the young specimens, which are grayer and much less ful- vous than the adults, the variation in color consists’ in some specimens being a little more strongly suffused with yellowish than others, and in the distinctness of the tail stripe, which is often wholly wanting, or pres- ent in varying degrees from a faint trace to a broad black stripe. This species is intermediate in size between C. sevzcews and C. mendo- cina, being larger than the former, and differing from it in its more strongly fulvous and generally lighter coloration, and from the latter in consider- ably smaller size and entire absence of any reddish suffusion. It is of interest to note that this species was not obtained by Mr. Peterson 44 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. in the foothills of the Andes, on the upper Rio Chico, where, however, he found a much larger species (C. vobustus) abundant, and also obtained, in the same region, a small series of a very much smaller species (C. seve- ceus). Inall probability C. co/éurnz will be found to be a plains or pampa species, while the others occupy the alluvial river valleys in the foothills of the Andes. Family URIDAZ. The Murine fauna of southern Patagonia is as strongly characterized by the types that are absent as by those that are present. The Voles, or the great subfamily Microtinze, are of course absent, as are also all the char- acteristic North American genera of the Cricetinz, as Pevomyscus, Ony- chomys, Neotoma, Retthrodontomys, and Szgmodon, although all extend into tropical America, and all but Oxychomys even reach the northern border of South America. Another set of genera, as Rhzpedomys, Nec- tomys, Holochilus, and Tylomys, which range over a large part of Central and South America, do not reach even the northern border of Patagonia. Of the seven prominent Patagonia genera — Exneomys, Reithrodon, Phyt- lotis, Eligmodontia, Oxymycterus, Oryzomys, and Akodon — only the last two have a wide distribution to the northward, except in the Andean region, where nearly all are highly developed. The single genus Notiomys is thus far known only from the original specimen taken near Santa Cruz. It is closely related to A4@gmodontia and certain forms of Akodon (subgenus Chelymys), types that abound over the pampean dis- tricts of Argentina and Bolivia. Genus MUS Linnezus. In America the genus AZus, a strictly Old World type, is of course rep- resented only by introduced species, three or four of which have become almost universally dispersed over both continents, and may all occur in Patagonia, although satisfactory evidence of this is at present lacking. Mus rattus Linn. Black Rat. The collection contains a single specimen (a half grown female) collected at Punta Arenas, December 30, 1897, by Mr. E. A. Colburn. The meas- urements as recorded by the collector are: ‘Length, 280; tail, 150; hind footts2:)' In coloration this specimen is very different from the black rats of the 64 ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURID:. 45 northern United States, being blackish olive gray instead of black, but it can be matched exactly in specimens of corresponding age from Jupiter Inlet, Florida, and from the Island of Trindad, B. W. I., but in both cases these specimens are Mus vattus more or less mixed with JZ. alexandrinus, to which category the Punta Arenas specimen doubtless belongs. The Black Rat (A7us vatfus Linn.) and the White-bellied or Roof Rat (Mus alexandrinus Geoffroy) are widely dispersed in the warmer parts of America, and at many localities hybridize freely, so that specimens of pure strain of either species are rare. In the northeastern United States the Black Rat was formerly an abundant inhabitant of houses and outbuildings in the farming districts, while the Brown or Wharf Rat (Mus norvegicus Erxleben=/us decumanus Pallas) swarmed in the cities, particularly about wharves and in warehouses. The latter is not only larger and more powerful than the black rat, but antagonizes it, and has to a large extent driven it out or exterminated it in the New England and Middle States of the Union. In the South Atlantic States the Roof Rat has long been the prevailing species, where it seems to have become widely dis- tributed. From Mexico, Central America and in northern South America both JZ rattus and M. alexandrinus are often received in collections, being caught in traps, in fields and wooded areas remote from settlements, by collectors in trapping for the indigenous rats of the country. In the Province of Chiriqui, Panama, Mr. J. H. Batty in this way unwittingly collected a very large series of M/us vattus,; but, as already said, hybrids of AZ. rattus and JZ. alexandrinus, combining in endless variety the characteristics of both species, are widely dispersed in tropical America. The common House Mouse (A/ws musculus Linn.), although not repre- sented in the present collection, doubtless also occurs in Patagonia, as it is the most widely dispersed in America of any of the introduced species of Mus. Darwin obtained it on East Falkland Island and at Maldonado. It has found its way to subarctic America, in Alaska and the remote in- terior of northern British Columbia. It is at home, thence southward everywhere, under the widest possible conditions of environment. Almost every collection of small mammals, whether made in the arid regions of our great Southwest, the swampy districts of the Gulf Coast, the hot low- lands of Mexico, Central and South America, or at high altitudes in the Peruvian Andes, contains specimens of this omnipresent pest. It will be 46 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. of interest soon to secure large series of specimens from widely separated localities where it has been long established for the purpose of determin- ing what modifications it may have undergone through the influence of very diverse conditions of environment. That strongly-marked differen- tiation will be obvious is evident from what is already known to have taken place among these mice inhabiting the fields in the vicinity of Jalapa, Mexico, where a well-marked black phase (A/us musculus jalape All. & Chapm.) has already been developed.' Genus ORYZOMYS Baird. Oryzomys Baird, Mamm. N. Am., 1858, 458 (as a subgenus of Hesfer- omys). Type and only species, Mus falustris Harlan. Zygodontomys Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., IX, 38, pl. i, figs. 1-7, March 11, 1897. Type, Ovxyzomys cherrtet Allen. Described as a genus, but more commonly treated as a subgenus of Ovyzomzys. Oligoryzomys Bangs, Proc. N. Engl. Zodl. Club, I, 94, Feb. 23, 1900 (as a subgenus of Ovyzomys). Type, Oryzomys navus Bangs. Evioryzomys Bangs, Proc. N. Engl. Zodél. Club, I, 96, Feb. 23, 1900 (as a subgenus of Ovyzomys). Type, Oryzomys monochromos Bangs. Melanomys Thomas, Novitates Zoolog., X, 41 (in text), April, 1903 (as a subgenus of Ovyzomys). Type, Oryzomys phaopus Thomas. The genus Ovyzomys, as commonly recognized, is the most abundant and most widely distributed genus of American Muride, it ranging from the warmer parts of the southeastern United States to Tierra del Fuego. Altogether about 185 species and subspecies have been referred to it, and the list is still rapidly increasing by the discovery and description of addi- tional forms. Although the group is far from homogenous, the transitions from one type to another are usually by gradual stages. In size the various species range from the size of a house mouse to that of the large brown rat; the tail may be much more than half the total length of the ani- mal or less than one quarter; the supraorbital ridges may be heavily devel- oped or obsolete; and the enamel pattern of the teeth is quite variable, As shown in the synonymy above, several minor groups have been set off as subgenera, with fairly well marked characters, and, owing to the num- erical unwieldiness of the genus, it will probably be found convenient, sooner or later, to employ them in the sense of full genera. ‘Cf. Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., IX, 1897, p. 198. &) <% ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. 47 Only two species, both apparently belonging to the typical section of the genus, are thus far known from Patagonia, where they are restricted to its extreme southern part. ORYZOMYS MAGELLANICUS (Bennett). (Plates IX, Fig. 2, Skull; X, Figs. 4 and 5, Teeth.) Mus magellanicus Bennett, P. Z. S., 1835, 191, Port Famine, Straits of Magellan.— Waterhouse, Zodl. Voyage Beagle, Mamm., 1839, 47, pl. xiv, animal, pl. xxiv, fig. 6, molar teeth. — Milne-Edwards, Miss. Scient. du Cap Horn, VI, Zool., Mamm., 1890, 20, Orange Bay. Hesperomys (Calomys) magellanicus Burmeister, Descr. phys. Rép. Argent., III, 1879, 226 (ex Bennett and Waterhouse). | Akodon| magellanicus Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., ii, 1897, 536, ex Bennett and Waterhouse. ? Hesperomys (Oryzomys) longicaudatus Milne-Edwards, Miss. Scient. du Cap Horn, VI, Zool., Mamm., 1890, 27, pl. iv, fig. 1, animal.? Adult (February). — Above yellowish brown, varied with black-tipped hairs, brighter on the top of the head, and middle and posterior part of the back, and paler on the sides; ventral surface buffy white, varying in different specimens from nearly clear white to strong buff; front of head yellowish gray strongly varied with black; ears of medium size, dusky, very thinly haired ; upper surface of feet flesh-color ; tail very long, dusky brown, a little darker above than below, and very thinly covered with short, bristly hairs, not concealing the annulations. Young, one fourth to half grown, in soft woolly pelage, are duller and less suffused with fulvous. Measurements. — Six adult males: Total length, 216 mm. (202-225); tail vertebrae, 120 (114-125); hind foot, 29.3 (28-30). Adult male skull : Total length, 26; basal length, 21; greatest breadth of brain case, 12; interorbital breadth, 3.6; length of nasals, 9.5; palatal length, 19; dia- stema, 6; palatal foramina, 5.5; upper molar series, 4. Represented by 17 specimens, of which to are adult and 7 young. They were all, except one, collected by Mr. Peterson in the Cordilleras at the head of the Rio Chico, four (all immature) being marked as from 1Mr. Oldfield Thomas, in reply to my inquiry respecting the inclusion of this species by Milne- Edwards, kindly informs me that this was probably an error, and that ‘“‘ the specimens were really Oryzomys magellanicus.”’ 48 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. the Pacific Slope ; they were all taken between February 14 and March 14, 1897. The other specimen is from Punta Arenas, collected by Mr. Colburn, Jan. 1, 1898. This species has not been previously recorded from north of Orange Bay and Port Famine, the latter being the type locality. The present material extends its known range along the Cordilleras to about latitude 48°. ORYZOMYS COPPINGERI (Thomas). Hesperomys (Calomys) coppingert Thomas, P. Z. S., 1881, 4, figs. 1, 2, ear and foot. Tom Bay, Cockle Cove.— Milne-Edwards, Miss. Scient. du Cap Horn, VI, Zoologie, Mamm., 1890, 26, pl. iv, fig. 2, animal, pl. viii, fig. 2, skull. Orange Bay, Tierra del Fuego. [Oryzomys| coppingert Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., ii, 1897, 529 (ex Thomas and Milne-Edwards). This species is unrepresented in the present collection. Following is Mr. Thomas’s original description of the species, which has since been reported by Milne-Edwards from Orange Bay, southern Tierra del Fuego, where he says the naturalists of the Mission Scientifique du Cap Horn (Mamm., p. 26) found it very common and captured a large number of them. ‘‘HIESPEROMYS (CALOMYS) COPPINGERI, Sp. Nov. ‘A skin from Tom Bay, and two specimens in spirit ‘caught with trap on a wooded islet about one acre in extent’ in Cockle Cove (Feb. 9, 1879). “Fur very long and soft, fully half an inch in length on the back. Ears rather short, nearly hidden in the fur. Whiskers of medium length, the shorter lower ones forming a thick shining white fringe along the upper lip. On the head and back the wool-hair is of a deep slaty blue for nine tenths of its length; then follows a subterminal band of yellow ; and the extreme tip is black. Mixed with this wool-hair there are a considerable number of longer black hairs, the resulting general colour being very similar to that of the common Water-Vole (Arvicola amphibius, L.). The dark color of the upper side extends on the limbs to the wrists and ankles, the feet being covered with short shining white hairs. The ears are thickly clothed with short woolly hairs similar in colour to the fur of the back. On the sides the yellow tips of the hairs gradually become lighter, and on the belly they are nearly pure white, the basal portion of the fur, however, from the chin to the anus, still being slate-coloured. PS ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURID. 4Q “The tail is very long and but scantily haired; on the upperside the scales are grey and the hairs dark reddish brown, on the lower the scales are pale yellow and the hairs white; along the centre of the underside, however, there is a distinct narrow line of dark-brown hairs, contrasting with the white ones on either side. “The ears possess, at about one third the height of the inner margin, a small projecting lobule, which seems to be present in many species of this genus, and to be well worthy of notice, as being very constant in the species in which it is found. The foot-pads are small but distinct, and the surface of the palms and the distal half of the soles are coarsely granulated, as shown in the woodcut. “The skull is that of a typical Hesferomys, but shows only a very faint trace of the supraorbital ridges supposed to be characteristic of the sub- genus Ca/omys, to which, however, the species undoubtedly belongs, as proved by its long tail and murine form. “The following are the dimensions of the two spirit specimens, both of which are adult males: b. aches Inches. Weneth\ of headiand!bodyiaj.ni otter one t= 4.3 4.2 Weneth olstail as Sacre ian ae cee yeh eee ees 6.4 6.1 Wenoth ofshead) cis cease rere Meret aie ees 1.4 ISAM CEA Ble Geis. co Ho nia OS Uo d Sabiod ad qagead Gat 0.55 0.53 Length of hind foot without claws................... 1.3 1.22 Distance) from! muzzle) foleat-orihice sy. --)4 1) reels teitelsne 1.08 ‘‘Measurements of skull of 6: Inch. Wenethy.iltelaiasa sccleto sr aaconene eo akere aearelle) slate: oot ctoie toma lcvepete miei t meta yerteye 12 Breadthit spt econ totsin yer svacdek ee ately helomie eh uab eta VaRTSe chee Rete yeeoned: 0.65 Breadth betweenkorDitsiumeci ici teisiierskeieteistaiste ase nrtecnote aor ela 0.16 Wceneathwotenasalswytaeirrimcrr richer ne retire eet etl eee 0.4 Length of lower jaw from condyle to tip of incisors................ 0.76 ‘The species to which 17. coppingeri appears most nearly allied are /7. lutescens, Gay, and Hi. philippit, Landb., both from Chili. The first, how- ever, is much larger, being 5.7 inches in length, while its tail is only as long as the trunk. Moreover the skull, as figured by Gay, possesses strong supraorbital ridges, while our three specimens of /7. cofppingerz, as stated above, show but little trace of them. //. Axzlpfiz, though some- what similar in size and colour, may be readily distinguished by the ex- 50 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. treme shortness of its tarsus (0.8 in.); and by the character of its fur, which is described as being short and fine, while that of 7. coppingerz, as mentioned above, is particularly long and soft.” (Thomas, @ c.) Genus ELIGMODONTIA F. Cuvier. Eligmodontia F. Cuvier, Ann. Sci. Nat. (2), VII, 1837, 168. + Type; Eligmodontia typus, sp. nov. Heligmodontia Agassiz, Nomen. Zool., Mamm., Addenda, 5, 1846. Emen- dation of E@gmodontia F. Cuvier. Eligmodon Thomas, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (6), XVIII, Oct., 1896, 307. Emendation of EZjgmodontia F. Cuvier. Calomys Waterhouse, P. Z. S., 1837, 21 (as a subgenus of A/us). Type, Mus bimaculatus Waterhouse. Preoccupied by CaH/omys D’ Orbigny & Geoffroy. Callomys Gray, List Mamm. Brit. Mus., 1843, 112 (as a full genus). = Calomys Waterhouse. Hesperomys Waterhouse, Zo6l. Voy. Beagle, pt. ii, Mamm., 1839, 75. No type; proposed to include, apparently, all the New World Muride except the Voles and the genus /Veofoma, or the ‘Sigmodontinz.” Mus bimaculatus was specifically used in defining the characters of Hesperomys, and if this species be taken as the type, as it is quite proper to do, Hesperomys becomes a synonym of Calomys Water- house, 1837 (ec Callomys D’Orbigny & Geoffroy). The genus E@igmodontia includes at present about 20 commonly recog- nized species and subspecies. Its range extends from southern Patagonia northward to southwestern Brazil and Bolivia, east of the Andes, and in the Andean region north at least to central Peru. Its metropolis, or area of greatest abundance, includes Argentina, Paraguay, and Bolivia. Four species have been recorded from the region here under consideration, but only one is represented in the Princeton University Patagonian collections. Eligmodontia and Phylotis appear to be inosculant groups, but lack of material at present writing prevents a satisfactory investigation of the matter. In rg01!I felt convinced that the griseoflava group was better referable to Phy//otis than to Eligmodontia, taking E. tyfus and E. mor- gant as the standard for Eigmodontia, and Phyllotis darwint and P. xanthopygus as the standard for Pfyllots. As, however, Mr. Thomas, ‘Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIV, p. 408, Nov. 39, 1901. eee ee PS EE ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURID&. 51 with far better means at hand for reaching a correct conclusion, prefers the association of the gr7seoflava group with Ekgmodontia, this course is reluctantly followed in the present connection, as griseoflava was one of the three species originally referred by Waterhouse to his subgenus Phyllotis. ELIGMODonTIA Typus F. Cuvier. Etigmodontia typus F. Cuvier, Ann. des. Sci. Nat., sér. ii, VII, Mars 1837, 168, pl. v, animal, skull, dentition, and intestinal canal. ‘Environs de Buenos Aires.”’ — Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., li, 1897, 532. — Lahille, Congr. Cien. Lat. Amer., III, 1899, 186. Mus elegans Waterhouse, P. Z. S., £637-(Nov,21,, 1837), 19, Bahia Blanca; Zodl. Voy. Beagle, Mamm., II, 1839, 41, pl. xii, animal, pl. XXxxIv, fig. 2, skull and teeth. Hesperomys elegans Burmeister, Descrip. phys. Rép. Argent., III, 1879, 220, Rio Chubut, collected by Durnford. Etigmodontia elegans Thomas, P. Z. S., 1898, 210. Chubut, East Pata- gonia. This species is not represented in the present material, but has been recorded from Tomba Point, on the coast, about 60 miles below the mouth of the Rio Chubut. The following description is transcribed from Waterhouse, it being more detailed and satisfactory in form than that given by F. Cuvier, which has a few months’ priority of publication. “Fur very long and soft; general colour of the upper parts of the body pale brownish yellow; the lower portion of the cheeks, and the under parts of the body pure white; the hairs of the ordinary fur of the back are gray at the base, pale ochre near the apex, and brown at’the apex; the longer hairs are brownish. On the sides of the body where the longer hairs are less numerous, the pale ochre colour prevails; the hairs on this part as on the back are deep gray at the base, but at a short distance from the apex they are white; nearer the tip shaded into yellow, and at the tip brown- ish: the limbs externally are of a pale yellow colour. The hairs of the throat and chest are pure white to the root, those on the belly are ob- scurely tinted with gray at the root. The feet are of a pale flesh-colour, and furnished with white hairs; the fore feet are of moderate SIZE ; the thumb nail is small and rounded, and the carpal tubercle is covered with hairs; the tarsi are long, and the white hairs extend over the whole of the under parts; the under side of the toes, however, are but sparingly 52 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. furnished. There appears to be but one large tubercle on the under side of the tarsus, and this, which is situated near the base of the toes, is thickly covered with silvery-white hairs. The tail is long, pale brown above, and pale flesh-colour beneath; above, it is furnished with minute brown hairs, and on the under side with white hairs. The ears are rather large, of a pale flesh-colour tolerably well clothed with hairs, which are of a pale yellow colour on the inner side, and white on the outer side — excepting on the fore part, where they are brown. A small tuft of white hairs springs from the base of the ear posteriorly. The hairs of the mous- taches are moderate; black at the base, and grayish at the apex. Inches. Lines. {mm.] “ Length from nose to root of tail........... 3 i gI Avene th yori tates, « sice ieee iatevehayssavelsye oversees hens 3 9 44.8 [Een athyrompnoseitOiedtntlerlan ysis I oO 25.4 MEenGth Of tarsuss is ciaiste suet isis aictere el sisi fo) IO 21 Wenothkoteearyne teria ree eter aren oO 6 12.7 ‘Habitat, Bahia Blanca (September).””— Waterhouse, Zodl. Voy. Beagle, 7. c. Based on a single specimen, collected by Darwin, who says: ‘Whilst bivouacking one night on shore, amongst some sand hillocks, this mouse, with its tail singed, leapt out of a bush which was placed on the fire. Its hind legs appeared long in proportion to the front, and it did not appear to be very active in endeavouring to make its escape.” Mr. Durnford, in his field notes on this species, published by Mr. Thomas (Z c.) says: ‘‘Not uncommon among bushes, into which it climbs readily. Comes out in the evening to feed. Like the long-tailed Rat [Ahgmodontia griseoflava| this species is most numerous in the summer, though during the winter a few may be found. It does not enter the house like its large relative, but is extremely numerous in the thick scrub and brushwood in the neighborhood of the Colony, and universally dis- tributed. It makes a small oval nest of fine grass and any soft material, which it places in the centre of a thick bush. It never burrows in the ground, but is extremely numerous among the thorn-bushes.”’ F. Cuvier’s name ¢yfus for this species appears to have unquestionable priority over e/egans of Waterhouse, the signature date of Cuvier’s paper on Ligmodontia being March, 1837, while the signature of the Proceedings of the Zodlogical Society containing Mr. Waterhouse’s paper was not ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. 53 delivered to the Society by the printer till Nov. 21, 1837. (C Sclater, F2S.,° 1603), 437.) ELIGMODONTIA MORGANI Allen. (Plates IX, Fig. 1, Skull ; X, Figs. 2 and 3, Teeth.) Llgmodontia morgant Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIV, 409, Nov. 30, 1901. Basaltic Cafions, 50 miles southeast of Lake Buenos Aires, Patagonia (‘‘ Arroyo Else’”’ on the labels and in the original description). Pelage very full, long and soft. Above dull ochraceous gray, finely lined with black, sides paler and more buffy, passing into a well-defined pale yellowish lateral line, extending from the sides of the nose to the base of the tail; lower parts pure white, the fur plumbeous at base, the apical half white; ears medium, dusky brown externally, pale buffy gray internally; tail nearly as long as head and body, sharply bicolor, dark brown above, grayish white below, well haired and slightly penicillate ; fore and hind feet above grayish white, well covered with short hairs; soles and palms flesh color, sparsely haired, the flesh-colored skin barely showing through the hairs. Measurements. —Total length (of type), 165 mm.; head and body, 85 ; tail, 80; hind foot, 23; ear (from dry skin), 13. Different specimens, apparently adult or nearly so, vary greatly in measurements, as shown by the following: Nine topotypes, all males but one, collected and measured by Mr. Colburn: Total length, 153 (145- 165) ; tail vertebrze, 72.5 (65-80) ; hind foot, 22.5 (22-23). Five (2 males and 3 females) from the upper Rio Chico, collected and measured by Mr. Peterson: Total length, 165 (148-180) ; tail vertebra, 77 (70-84) ; hind foot, 23 (21-24). Seven specimens from Cape Fairweather and vicinity (all males but one), collected and measured by Mr. Peterson: Total length, 150 (144-170) ; tail vertebrae, 69.4 (66—77) ; hind foot, 22.5 (22-24). Skull much as in &. fypus, but rather smaller, and with the same character of dentition. Total length (type), 24; basilar length, 17.5; zygo- matic breadth, 12; mastoid breadth, 11; interorbital breadth, 4; length of nasals, 10; palate, 5; palatal foramina, 5 x 2; interparietal, 11 x 2.5; upper toothrow, 4; lower jaw, 12; height at condyle, 5.3; lower toothrow, 4. This species is represented by 48 specimens, of which 17 are from the coast and 31 from the interior, and among the latter are several quite 54 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. young, taken in March. The coast specimens were all collected by Mr. Peterson, as follows: Gallegos River, 2 specimens, May 23; Halliday Ranch, 1 specimen, June 24; Coy Inlet, 5 specimens, August 29-31, and November 3-9; Cape Fairweather, 8 specimens, July 11-13. Of the interior specimens, 11 were collected on the upper Rio Chico, by Mr. Peterson, January 31 to February 8 and March 1; 13 are from Basalt Cafions, the type locality, collected by Mr. Colburn, April 4-29; and 8 (mostly quite young) from Swan Lake, collected by Mr. Colburn, March 12-21. Only about one third of the specimens, or perhaps less, can be consid- ered as fully adult; the others range from one fourth to one half grown, and the remainder from one half grown to nearly full-sized young adults. The younger specimens are darker, grayer, and less fulvous than the adults. The old adults are quite strongly fulvous on the sides as compared with the middle-aged and young adults, as shown by both the upper Rio Chico specimens and the coast series. No. 84216, an old male, “Upper Rio Chico, near Cordilleras, Feb. 3, 1897,” is the palest and most fulvous example of all, but seems to be merely an unusually light colored and very fulvous extreme of the series and not specifically different. This species has externally the appearance of a small-eared PhyHotis. Its nearest known ally appears to be &. typus (elegans Waterhouse), from which it differs in having much smaller ears and shorter tail, the foot and body being nearly as in £. typus. The type of &. e/egaus was collected by Darwin at Bahia Blanca and is much changed in color by exposure for a long time as a mounted speci- men. ‘Two other specimens in fair condition from Chubut, eastern Pata- gonia, identified as &. elegans by Mr. Thomas, very closely resemble in color the series of &. morganz, but differ from them strikingly in their much larger ears and much longer tails. There are no flesh measure- ments, but the vertebrz still remain in the tail and theskinsare fairly well made up. ; ELIGMODONTIA GRACILIPES (Waterhouse). Mus gracilipes Waterhouse, P. Z. S., 1837 (November 21, 1837), 19 (Bahia Blanca); Zodl. Voy. Beagle, Mamm., II, 1839, 45, pl. xi, animal, pl. xxiv, fig. 4, skull, teeth and under side of tarsus. Lligmodontia gracilipes Trouessart, Cat. Mam., ii, 1897, 532. — Thomas, P. Z. S., 1898, 211, Chubut, East Patagonia. 7 OO NN ee ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. 55 This species was described by Waterhouse from a single specimen ob- tained by Darwin at Bahia Blanca. It has since been recorded by Thomas from Chubut, East Patagonia, and therefore must be included in the present work. Mr. Waterhouse’s description, in his account of the Mam- malia of the voyage of the Beagle, is as follows: “General color pale yellowish brown, a tint produced by the admixture of black and pale fawn colour; the hairs of the ordinary fur being of the latter tint near the apex, and dusky at the apex, whilst the longer hairs are black. The feet, tail and under parts of the body and sides of the muzzle, are pure white. All the hairs of the body (which are soft, and of moderate length), are deep gray at the base. The ears are of moderate size, well clothed with hairs, of which those on the inner side are yellow- ish, and those on the outer are brown on the anterior part, and white on the posterior. A small tuft of white hairs springs from the neck immedi- ately behind the ears; this tuft is hidden when the ears are folded back. The tail is slender and short (being not quite equal to the body in length) of a pale flesh-colour, and sparingly furnished with minute white hairs. The feet are very small and slender, and the naked parts are of a flesh- colour. ‘The sole of the foot is covered with hairs; the toes beneath and the tubercles (which are as in AZus Musculus), however, are naked. The hairs of the moustaches are of moderate length, and of a blackish colour, some of them, however, are grayish white. Inches. Lines, [mm. ] ‘Length from nose to root of tail ......... 2 10 [53] SOnGEn OF tally cat aiynce cuy-ge oresvei eee ere I 7 [40] Rength frouy nose*toeyer.. enone coe fe) 44 [9.1] DMength from nose’ totears tii2 okie) ee Oo 84 [15] Length of tarsus (claws included). ........ fe) 64 [14] IGens thot Cats crscictey-vd cise a tuners Ae oO 44 exe ‘Habitat, Bahia Blanca (September).” Mr. Durnford (cf Thomas, @ c.) refers to this species as less common at Chubut than the other species of E/igmodontia found there, and that it “makes its nest in a thick bush about a foot above the ground and of grass torn into fragments.”’ ELIGMODONTIA GRISEOFLAVA (Waterhouse). Mus (Phyllotis) griseoflavus Waterhouse, P. Z. S., 1837 (Nov. 21, 1837), 28, Rio Negro. c 56 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Mus griseofiavus Waterhouse, Zod]. Voy. Beagle, Mamm., II, 1839, 62, pl. xxii, animal, pl. xxxiv, fig. 16, skull and teeth. Hesperomys griseofavus Burmeister, Descrip. phys. Rép. Argent., III, 1879, 219. Rio Chubut, collected by Durnford. Eligmodontia griseoflava Thomas, P. Z. S., 1898, 210. Chubut, East Patagonia. Phyllotis griseoflavus Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., 1897, 534.—Lahille, Congr. Cien. Lat. Amer., III, 1899, 187.—Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIV, 1901, 408. This species is recorded from Chubut by Mr. Thomas (¢. c.), and thus comes within the region included in the present work. The following is a transcript of Waterhouse’s description in the Mammalia of the Voyage of the Beagle. “Ears large; tail rather shorter than the head and body taken together ; tarsi slender, and moderately long; fur long and very soft; general tint of the upper parts of head and body grayish, washed with brownish yellow ; on the sides of the body a palish yellow tint prevails; feet, chin, throat, and under parts of body pure white; tail rather sparingly clothed with hairs, those on the apical portion rather long, and forming a slight pencil at the tip; on the upper side and at the tip of the tail the hairs are brown, on the under side they are dirty white; the ears are very sparingly clothed with minute brownish yellow hairs internally ; externally, on the fore part, the hairs are rather longer and of a brown colour; the upper incisors are orange, and the lower incisors are yellow; the hairs of the moustaches are long, and of a black colour; the hairs of the back are deep gray at the base, brownish at the tip, and annulated with pale brownish yellow near the tip; the longer hairs are brown; the hairs of the belly are white extern- ally, and gray at the base; on the throat the hairs are white to the root. Inches. Lines. mm. “ Length from nose to root of tail.......... 6 8 168 Meenethvotstatleren snare calor sttstleisio rete ole 5 6 140 Length from nose to eaf...........-....-. I 4s 35.3 Length of tarsus (claws included) ........ I 24 30.8 Wenothiotieate =m tenet taeiier nator oO 8 16.8 ‘“ Habitat, Northern Patagonia (August).”’ Darwin adds: ‘“Inhabits the dry gravelly plain, bordering the Rio Negro.” Respecting the reference of this species to the genus Aigmodontia instead of to Phy//otis, Mr. Thomas observes : ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. 57 ‘“T have long realized that the animal commonly known as ‘ Phyl/otis’ griseoflavus has so: different a skull from that of the typical species of Phyllotis, that it could not be considered as really congeneric with them. But, on the other hand, its cranial characters are by no means so different from those of the long-tailed species of EZgmodontia, and rather than make a new generic term for it I refer it to that genus, in which it bears to the other species about the same relative proportion in size as Jus vattus does to M. musculus.” The enamel pattern of the teeth, however, is quite different from that of the typical species of A’gmodontia, and the teeth themselves are more hypsodont, as in P#ylof’s. Externally and in the large size there is also a close agreement with Phy//otts. Mr. Durnford gives the following account (cf Thomas, /. c.) of the habits of this species as observed by him near the mouth of the Rio Chubut: “This Rat is only found close to the Colony [Chubut] in the summer, but at that season it overruns many of the houses and is extremely destructive, eating boots, calico, etc., and is especially fond of gnawing the metal spouts of teapots. What becomes of it in the winter I do not know, but I believe it lies dormant under the scrub and brushwood. It never burrows in the ground, but lives under old logs, bushes, etc., and the female makes a nest, generally in the centre of a thick bush of bark stripped into fine shreds and any soft material it can find. It can jump and climb with great agility.” The Et@gmodontia (seu Phyllotts) griseofava group ranges northward from southern Patagonia over the chaco and pampa regions of Argentina, Paraguay, and Bolivia, and includes &. griseoflava domorum Thomas from Tapacari, &. g. centralis Thomas from central Cordova, Phylotis chacoénsts Allen from the chaco boreal of Paraguay, and P. cachinus Allen from the upper Cachi River, Argentina. These are all closely related and may be merely local forms or subspecies of griseoflava, as considered by Mr. Thomas. Genus PHYLLOTIS' Waterhouse: Phyllotts Waterhouse, P. Z. S., 1837 (Nov. 21, 1837), 28 (as a subgenus of Mus). No type designated. Phyllotts Fitzinger, Sitzungsb. Math.-Nat. Cl. K. Akad. Wiss. Wien, LVI, 1867, 83 (as a full genus). ‘Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), IX, April, 1902, p. 241. 58 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Phyllotis Thomas, P. Z. S., 1884, 449 (as a subgenus of Hesferomys). Mus (Phyllotis) darwintt Waterhouse designated as type. Phyllotis, on the one hand, closely approaches EZigmodontia (see auntea, p. 50), and on the other“is not very sharply separable from Reithrodon, through such species as ‘ Phyllotis” boliviana and ‘ Reithrodon” pictus. About 20 to 25 species and subspecies have thus far been assigned to the group, which has about the same geographical range as Evigmodontia, namely, from southern Patagonia northward over the plateau region east of the Andes to northern Bolivia, and through the Andean region north to Ecuador. The two Patagonian species here included were both de- scribed by Waterhouse in 1837 from specimens collected by Darwin, and are both well represented in the Princeton University Expedition col- lections. PHYLLOTIS XANTHOPYGUS (Waterhouse). (Plates XIII, Fig. 1, Skull; XIV, Figs. 2 and 3, Teeth.) Mus (Phyllotis) xanthopygus Waterhouse, P. Z. S., 1837 (N@v. 21, 1837), 28. Santa Cruz, Patagonia. Mus xanthopygus WNaterhouse, Zool. Voyage Beagle, Mamm., 1839, 63, pl. xxii, animal, pl. xxxiv, fig. 16, teeth. FHlesperomys (Calomys) xanthopygus Burmeister, Descript. phys. Rép. - Argent., III, 1879, 225 (ex Waterhouse.) Hesperomys (Phyllotis) xanthopygus Milne-Edwards, Mission Scient. du Cap Horn, VI, Zool., Mamm., 1890, 20, pl. vi, fig. 2, animal. Santa Cruz, Patagonia. Phyllotis xanthopygus Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., ii, 1897, 534 (ex Water- house and Thomas).—Lahille, Congr. Cien. Lat. Amer., III, 1899, 187. Adult (November). — Pelage very soft and very long and full. Gen- eral color above, from the eyes posteriorly, dull brown varied with black- tipped hairs and faintly suffused with buff or pale fulvous, darkest over the median area, the sides more buffy and less dark, passing into a strong buff lateral line, indistinct above; ventral surface whitish (under fur dark plumbeous, scarcely showing at the surface), faintly washed in most speci- mens with very pale buff, giving the general effect of soiled yellowish white; whole front of head from a point midway between ears and eyes gray, varied with black-tipped hairs; hairs at base of tail rusty fulvous; ears large, dark brown, rather thinly furred; upper surface of feet whitish, palms and soles flesh-color; tail about one half the total length, generally ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. 59 well haired, especially on the apical half, and penicillate, bicolor, brown above and whitish below. Adult (February to April). — The pelage is thinner, grayer and darker, with less fulvous suffusion throughout, and the fulvous lateral line very indistinct, evidently from fading. Young Adults (March and April). — Above dark gray, strongly varied with blackish, and very faintly suffused with fulvous ; lower border of sides tinged more or less strongly with fulvous, sometimes forming a poorly defined lateral band ; ventral surface gray, sometimes without fulvous wash, or varying from a faint buffy pectoral spot to a large strongly buff area occupying most of the ventral surface. Measurements. —Six old males (from Basaltic Cafions) measure: Total length, 235 mm. (230-250); tail vertebrze, 115 (110-125); hind foot, 30 (29-30). Four old females measure: Total length, 236 (225-242); tail vertebrae, 115 (110-119); hind foot, 30.6 (28-31). Young adults range in total length from about 205 to 225, with a tail length of 100 to 110. Five adults from the coast (mouth of Rio Coy, all males except one) measure: Total length, 240 ( 30-247); tail vertebrae, 114.5 (105 — 116); hind foot, 30.6 (28-32). An average fully adult skull measures: Total length, 32; basal length, 27; zygomatic breadth, 16.5; width of braincase, 14; interorbital breadth, 4; palatal length, 14; palatal foramina, 7-5; diastema, 8; upper molar Senies, 5. Represented by 24 specimens, of which about 17 are fully adult, the rest being more or less immature. Five (3 adults and 2 young) were taken on the upper Rio Chico in February; 5, all adults, at the mouth of the Rio Coy, Nov. 6-10: 6 (mostly immature) at Swan Lake in March, and 9 at the Basaltic Cafions in April. As noted above, they represent three distinct phases of pelage, two of which are seasonal and the other the adolescent stage. The Rio Coy series represents full winter pelage, and the upper Rio Chico series the summer pelage; the Swan Lake and Basaltic Cafions specimens are in the early fall pelage (March and April), and differ strikingly from Rio Coy specimens, taken in November. Mr. Waterhouse states (Voy. Beagle, Z c.) that there were three speci- mens of this species collected by Mr. Darwin; the specimen in the British Museum, designated as the type, is a rather young individual, and is in 60 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. the phase of pelage corresponding to the present March and April speci- mens taken on the plains at the eastern base of the Andes. Mr. Darwin says of this species (Voy. Beagle, 7 c.) : ‘‘Extremely abun- dant in the coarse grass and thickets in the ravines at Point Desire and Santa Cruz ; was caught in a trap baited with cheese.”’ Mr. Peterson says that the Rio Coy specimens were collected “ around a large spring, in heavy grass and brush”’; and that the upper Rio Chico specimens were taken ‘in the Rio Chico valley, close to the river.” Phyllotis xanthopygus, in the full brown pelage of winter, bears a strong resemblance in coloration to P. mécropus, but it is considerably larger in external measurements, with a relatively longer and a much more hairy tail. The skulls of the two species, however, are practically of the same size. It can be quite closely matched in pelage and color by specimens of P. darwint, but the latter has a longer tail and much weaker dentition. Mr. Waterhouse compared it with his Phy/otts griseoflavus, probably its nearest ally, from northern Patagonia (Rio Negro), from which he says it differs in much smaller size, relatively much shorter tail, and in the struc- ture of the molar teeth, as illustrated in plate xxxiv of the “ Voyage of the Beagle” (Mammalia). PHYLLOTIS MICROPUS (Waterhouse). (Plates XII, Fig. 13, Skull ; XIV, Fig. 1, Teeth.) Mus micropus Waterhouse, P. Z. S., 1837, 17 (Santa Cruz River, Pata- gonia) ; Zodl. Voyage Beagle, Mamm., II, 1839, 61, pl. xx, animal, pl. xxxiv, fig. 13, teeth. Interior plains of Patagonia, in lat. 50°, near the banks of the Santa Cruz. Hlesperomys (Habrothrix) micropus Burmeister, Descrip. phys. Rép. Argent., III, 1879, 217 (ex Waterhouse). [Akodon| micropus Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., ii, 1897, 536 (ex Water- house and Burmeister). — Lahille, Congr. Cien. Lat. Amer., III, 1899, 188. Adult (February). — Above yellowish brown, with a slightly rufescent cast, strongly varied with black-tipped hairs ; sides lighter, more yellowish ; nose less yellow, dusky gray ; below gray, washed more or less with buff or tawny, chiefly on the pectoral and post-pectoral areas ; ears large, well haired, similar in color to the median dorsal area; tail rather more than one third of the total length, bicolor, dark brown above, gray or yellowish ee > ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA:. 61 gray below thinly clothed with short hairs in young specimens, nearly naked in adults ; upper surface of the feet yellowish white or nearly flesh- color; palms and soles naked, the former yellowish flesh-color, the latter darker, more brownish. Young specimens differ little in color from the adults, but the pelage is of a softer, more woolly texture. Measurements. — Eight adult males measure: Total length, 221 mm. * (212-237); tail vertebrze, 92 (85-100) ; hind foot, 29 (27-30). Ten adult females measure: Total length, 221 (215-235) ; tail vertebrae, 93 (85- 100) ; hind foot, 29 (28-30). A young adult and an adult skull measure respectively: Total length, 29.5, 32; basal length, 25, 28; zygomatic breadth, 17, 19; mastoid breadth, 8, 9.5; interorbital breadth, 3.8 ; length of nasals, 7.3, 8; palatal length, 13, 15 ; palatal foramina, 7, 7-4; diastema, 7, 8; upper molar series, 5.2, 5.3. Of the fifty specimens of this species about one half are fully adult, the rest being more or less immature, but mainly “young adults.”” Four were collected by Mr. Colburn — two at Swan Lake in March, and two at Basaltic Cafions in April—and the rest by Mr. Peterson, nearly all during the first half of February (January 31-February 17), and mostly in the Rio Chico valley, close to the river. Two others were taken on the Pacific slope in March. The coloration of the upper parts is very uniform throughout the series, varying slightly in general tone on the back from yellowish brown to a slight rufescent tinge, the latter seeming to characterize very old specimens. The whitish gray ventral surface varies from a slight tinge of deep buff over a limited portion of the middle region to a much deeper rusty buff, covering a much larger area. Some specimens quite lack the buffy wash. A portion of the specimens forming the present series was identified by comparison with Waterhouse’s type, still extant in the British Museum —a fairly well preserved skin with an imperfect skull. This specimen, according to Darwin’s note, was “caught in the interior plains of Pata- gonia, in latitude 50°, near the banks of the Santa Cruz.” Mr. Peterson states (MSS. notes) that this is the most common species met with on the “Rio Chico Cordillero, especially in the heavy grass near water ; but was also caught in timber at some distance from water.” It appears to have been rare further north in the more open country where 62 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Mr. Colburn worked, he securing only four specimens during six weeks of constant trapping. Genus REITHRODON Waterhouse. Reithrodon Waterhouse, P. Z. S., 1837 (Nov. 21, 1837), 29° Zool” Voy- Beagle, Mamm., 1839, 68. No type specified. Reithrodon Coues, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1874, 185. Type, R. cuniculoides \Naterh.— Thomas, Ann.& Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), WEE: Sept. 1901, 254.— Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, May, 1903, 194 (sub Auneomys). Variants or emendations are: Aethrodon Agassiz, 1846; Rheitrodon Roger, 1887 ; Rhithrodon Flower & Lydekker, 1891. The genus Rezthrodon, as originally constituted in 1837, consisted of two species, R. typicus and R. cuniculoides. Later, other species of American Muridz with grooved upper incisors were referred to it, including the North American genus now known as Rezthrodontomys, although these two groups have little in common beyond the superficial character of grooved upper incisors. Other species formerly associated with it are the genera Euneomys Coues and Sigmomys Thomas, neither of which prove to have more than a superficial likeness to Rezthvodon as now restricted and as originally constituted. Two years later, in 1839, Waterhouse himself added to it a third species, R. chinchilloides, which, proving not to be congeneric with the others, has since become the type of the genus Euneomys. In 1874, Coues (/ c.) divided Recthrodon into “ Reithrodon proper,” with 2. cunrculoides as the type, and Euneomys, a new subgenus of Rezth- vodon, with R. chinchilloides as the type. In 1901, Thomas (/ c.) adopted these two divisions as full genera, and, having previously removed his Reithrodon alstoni as the type of a new genus Sigmomys,! arranged the ‘South America groove-toothed Muridz” in three genera, Rezthrodon, Euneomys and Szgmomys, which really have little in common. Later a somewhat detailed comparison of Rezthrodon and Euneomys was given by the present writer.’ The genus Rezthrodon is represented by four species and an additional subspecies, and, so far as known to me, is restricted to Patagonia, Argen- ‘Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), VIII, Aug., 1901, p. 150. * Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, 1903, pp. 194, 195. ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURID&. 63 tina and Paraguay. Besides those here included, R. ¢yfzceus Waterh. was described from specimens taken at Maldonaldo, and it has been reported as occurring in southern Paraguay and contiguous portions of Argentina. The other forms are thus far known only from southern Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. REITHRODON CUNICULOIDES Waterhouse. Reithrodon cuniculoides Waterhouse, P. Z. S., 1837) (Nowij2iny 1837), 30 (Santa Cruz, Patagonia) ; Zodlogy Voyage Beagle, Mamm., 1839, 69, pl. xxvi, animal, pl. xxxiv, fig. 2, skull and teeth. — Coues, N. Am. Rodent., 1877, 119 (ex Waterhouse). — Burmeister, Descript. phys. Rep. Argent., III, 1879, 230 (ex Waterhouse).— Milne-Edwards, Miss. Scient. du Cap Horn, VI, Zool., Mamm., 1890, 10, pl. ii, animal (Santa Cruz, Patagonia).— Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., i, 1897, 533. —Thomas, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), VIII, Sept. 1901254: Adult (April). — Above pale fulvous gray strongly varied with black- tipped hairs, the pelage being dark plumbeous for the basal three fourths or four fifths and ending in a band of pale creamy buff, with a profuse in- termixture of longer, coarser black-tipped hairs ; sides lighter, more yel- lowish, passing gradually into the nearly uniform ochraceous buff of the ventral surface; inside of the thighs whitish; ears large, well clothed with short hairs, dusky brown externally, deep buff internally, with a tuft of buffy hairs at the anterior base and a postauricular patch of ochraceous buff; upper surface of the feet white or faintly creamy white; palms naked, light flesh-color; soles heavily furred as far as the base of the toes, the furred portion dusky brown, as are the tubercules, but the under surface of the toes flesh-color; tail rather more than one third the total length, thickly haired, yellowish dusky brown above, sides and below whitish. Measurements. — Eight adults measure: Total length, 225 mm. (215— 230, with one 240) ; tail vertebra, 86 (80-90, with one 100); hind foot, 34 (33-35). Ten females measure: Total length, 220 (210-235).; tail vertebrae, 88 (80-95, with two at 100) ; hind foot, 33 (32-34). Adult skulls measure in total length from 33-35 mm., and in zygomatic breadth from 18-19. Represented by 28 specimens, of which 21 were collected at the Basaltic Cafions in April, and 4 at Swan Lake in March and May, by Mr. Colburn ; the other three are from the coast region, two of which were collected near 64 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Santa Cruz, in February, by Mr. Colburn, and the other at the mouth of the Rio Coy, by Mr. Peterson, November 10. This specimen has the ears nearly naked and dark brown on both surfaces, and the general col- oration is browner and less olivaceous than in the March, April and May specimens. Mr. Peterson’s manuscript notes indicate that some of the specimens taken were “caught in heavy grass, close to springs of water.” The original specimens described by Waterhouse were taken by Dar- win, who says: ‘Specimens were procured at Port Desire, St. Julian, and Santa Cruz; at this latter place they were caught in numbers (in traps baited with cheese), both near the coast and on the interior plains. A specimen from Santa Cruz weighed 1336 grains. In the early part of January, there were young individuals at Port St. Julian.” (Zodl. Voy. Beagle, Mamm., p. 71.) Mr. Colburn’s localities show that the species ranges in the interior to one hundred and fifty or two hundred miles northwest of St. Julian and Santa Cruz. REITHRODON CUNICULOIDES OBSCURUS Allen. Reithrodon cuniculordes obscurus Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, 190, May 9, 1903. Punta Arenas, Patagonia. Similar to Retthrodon cuniculoides but darker throughout, the upper parts dark brown, varied with black-tipped hairs and suffused with fulvous, the sides yellowish, and the ventral surface brownish ochraceous ; inner side of thighs and anal region whitish ; top of head blackish, slightly varied with buff-tipped hairs; sides of nose and cheeks brownish ochraceous like the ventral surface ; ears very thinly haired, brown externally, brownish buff internally, with a deep ochraceous buff postauricular patch ; upper sur- face of feet clear white; tail blackish above along median line, sides and below grayish white. Measurements (of type, from dry skin). — Total length, 195 mm.; head and body, 130; tail, 65; hind foot, 34. (The tail appears to have lost a small portion of the tip.) Skull (imperfect), length of nasals, 15.5; palatal length 18; palatal foramina, 10; diastema, 9.5; upper molar series, 6. Unfortunately represented by only the type specimen, which has no flesh measurements. The skull shows the specimen to be fully adult, and larger than any skull in the large series of R. cuniculoides. It is characterized by its very strong, dark coloration, between which and the darkest, most- ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. 65 deeply colored specimen in a series of 28 examples from the coast region, near Santa Cruz, there is a striking contrast through the greater depth and intensity of all the tints. Considering the climatic conditions of the two regions — the moist, forested country of the Punta Arenas district and the open, arid plains of the Santa Cruz district—the differences here shown in the coloration of the two phases conform to what would be expected to result from such diverse physical conditions. The differences are certainly not to be accounted for by season or age. It finds an exact parallel in the cases of 4kodon xanthorhinus as compared with 4. canescens and /. micheelsent as compared with 4. macronyx. REITHRODON HATCHERI Allen. (Plate XIV, Figs. 8-8d, Skull.) Reithrodon hatchert Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Flisé, XD ror; May 9, 1903. Pacific slope of the Cordilleras, upper Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, Patagonia. Similar in size and proportions to R. cuntculotdes, but much darker, and with much less fulvous suffusion. Adult male (type), March.— Above dark grayish brown, varied with black-tipped hairs, faintly suffused with grayish fulvous; sides paler, pass- ing gradually into the pale buff of the ventral surface; sides of nose, lower border of cheeks, lower border of flanks, and whole ventral surface cream-buff, except inside of thighs and adjoining portion of ventral sur- face; ears rather thinly haired, externally dull brown, internally yellowish buff, the hairs at the anterior base of the ears whitish and the postauricular patch pale buff; upper surface of the feet white; soles of hind feet to base of toes densely haired, dark brown, toes flesh-color; tail with a narrow brown stripe above, sides and below dull whitish. Measurements. — Type: Total length, 230 mm.; tail vertebrze, 78; hind foot, 34; Seven specimens (4 males and 3 females) measure; Total length, 215 (200-230); tail vertebre, 77 (75-82); hind foot, 33.3 (32-35). Skull (type). — Total length, 35.7; basal length, 31 ; zygomatic breadth, 20.5; interorbital breadth, 4; length of nasals, 16; palatal length, 17.5; palatal foramina, 9; diastema, 8.5 ; upper molar series, 6.4. Represented by ten specimens, all collected by Mr. Peterson in the Cordilleras at the head of the Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, and all but one 66 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. (the type, taken March 11) between February 4 and 21, 1897. Part of the specimens, including the type, are in the dress of the breeding season, while others have partly or wholly acquired the postbreeding dress. These have a stronger suffusion of yellowish buff on the sides and ventral surface, but are otherwise similar to the type. A quarter-grown young example is similar in general coloration to the adults except that the ears have the external surface blackish and the internal surface deep buff, with the hairs at the anterior base of the ears and the postauricular patch also deep buff, in prominent contrast with the surrounding pelage, as is not the case in the adults. Reithrodon hatchert is readily distinguishable from &. cuniculoides by its much darker and less fulvous coloration, the contrast in color between the two series being conspicuously noticeable. There are apparently no cranial differences of importance. Genus EUNEOMYS Coues. Euneomys Coues, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1874, 185 (as a subgenus of Rezthrodon). Type, Retthrodon chinchilloides Waterh.— Thomas, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), VIII, Sept., 1901, 254 (as a full genus). —Allen, Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, May, 1903, 194. The early history of Awneomys has already been given under that of Reithrodon. The two genera differ so radically in certain cranial charac- ters, especially in the structure of the last two molars, both above and below, that they have no close relationship, and the two are placed together for treatment in the present connection only as a matter of convenience. Their differences were, in part, clearly indicated by the late Dr. Coues, on the basis of Waterhouse’s plates of the skulls and teeth of the two spe- cies Coues designated respectively as the types of the two groups. These I have already summarized in another connection as follows : “The most important of these [the differential characters pointed out by Coues] are: (1) ‘Anterior root of zygoma deeply emarginate in front’ in Reethrodon and ‘about straight in front’ in Ewneomys , (2) ‘palate end- ing much behind the molar series and showing a median ridge intervening between lateral paired deep excavations’ in Rezthrodon, and ‘palate ending nearly opposite the last molars, slightly ridged or excavated’ in Euneomys ; (3) ‘pterygoid fossze deeply excavated, and the bones very closely approx- imated’ in Rezthrodon, and ‘pterygoid fossz shallow and these bones less ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURID. 67 approximated’ in Awneomys,; (4) ‘condyloid process of lower jaw con- cave internally’ in Rezthrodon, and ‘condyloid process of the lower jaw flat internally’ in Ezneomys ; (5) ‘coronoid process slender, very oblique’ in Rezthrodon, and ‘coronoid process very broad, nearly vertical’ in Aa- neomys. To these may be added (6) the very different enamel pattern of the molar teeth in the two groups, in Recthrodon the folds being trans- verse with the outer and inner loops alternating, and in Aameomys oblique, with one less fold in each of the last two upper teeth, and in the first two lower teeth—a very radical difference in tooth structure, which alone warrants the generic separation of the two groups. As Waterhouse fig- ured the crown surface of the teeth in only R. cumzculoides, this most im- portant difference of all necessarily escaped Coues’s attention. “Tn both these genera— Resthrodon and Euneomys—the tooth struc- ture is remarkably distinctive for genera of Murida, and, as compared with each other, presents almost the extremes of unlikeness. But a further noteworthy difference (7) is seen in a pair of depressions on the posterior third of the palatal surface in Aaneomys, which are absent in Rezthrodon and in all the allied genera.”’ The only species I can confidently refer to Eameomys are the two de- scribed below, namely £. chznchilloides (Waterh.), from Tierra del Fuego, and £. peterson, from the upper Rio Chico, in the foothills of the Cor- dilleras, Patagonia. Phyllotis boliviensis and P. pictus, which have been referred to Aune- omys, appear to be merely somewhat aberrant forms of Phy//otis. EUNEOMYS CHINCHILLOIDES (Waterhouse). Reithrodon chinchilloides Waterhouse, Zoél. Voyage Beagle, Il, Mammalia, 1839, 72, pl. xxvii, animal, pl. xxxiv, fig. 20, skull and teeth. ‘South shore of the Strait of Magellan, near the eastern entrance.’’— Bur- meister, Descrip. phys. Rép. Argent., III, 1879, 217 (ex Waterhouse). — Milne-Edwards, Mission Scient. du Cap Horn, VI, Zool., Mamm., 1890, 29, pl. ili, animal. Orange Bay, southern Tierra del Fuego. Reithrodon (Euneomys) chinchilloides Coues, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1874, 185, footnote; Nat. Hist. No. 1, Muridz, 1874, 17; N. Am. Roden., 1877, 119. As this species is unrepresented in the present collection, the descrip- tion here given is transcribed from Waterhouse. 68 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. ‘‘ Description. — Ears small; tail shorter than the body; tarsus moder- ate; fur long and extremely soft. General hue of the upper parts of the head and body ashy brown; lower part of the cheeks and sides of the body are of a delicate yellow colour; the under parts of the head and body and the rump are cream colour. The ears are blackish; the tail is toler- ably well clothed with longish hairs, which are, however, not so thickly set as to hide the scales—on the upper side they are blackish brown; on the sides and beneath they are white. The feet are white. All the fur is of a deep gray colour at the base; the hairs of the back are of a very pale yellow colour (almost white) near the tip, and brown at the tip; the longer hairs are black at the apex. The incisors are yellow; the hairs of the moustaches are numerous and very long—some of them are whitish, and others are black at the root, and gray at the apex. Inches. __ Lines. [mm. } ‘Seng thifrom) nose ito) rootiofjtaillney4- seta oie 5 fo) 127 Soe Olotall at ier says haute he Konsnacs etoie) oeeteveniensr oes 2 4 59 GY SteGTaay MORO KO). GHG Cone Sula boadoouo Feat I 2 25.8 - OLtarsus (claws included). 0... 2... < =. I fe) 25.4 SEM LOMA ts Ceara @ atvarotles Sera a mente wate an oO 5% 12.6 ‘Habitat, South shore of the Strait of Magellan, near the Eastern entrance.’ — Waterhouse, 2 c. Milne-Edwards (/. c.) states that it was obtained at Orange Bay, where, however, only two examples were secured during a long sojourn there by the French Mission. Little therefore appears to be known regarding its distribution or habits. EUNEOMYS PETERSONI Allen. (Plates XIII, Fig. 4, Skull; XIV, Figs. 6 and 7, Teeth.) Euneomys petersont Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, 192, May 9, 1903. Near Cordilleras, upper Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, Patagonia. Similar in coloration to Phylotis xanthopygus, but very much smaller, with a relatively very short tail and naked soles, but the upper incisors as strongly grooved as in Retthrodon cuniculoides. Adult (type), February.—Pelage very long and soft, almost woolly. Above dark gray-brown, varied with blackish and fulvous, the pelage being plumbeous black for the basal four fifths with an apical band of brownish fulvous, and many longer black hairs intermixed ; sides much paler and more . ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. 69 fulvous, the fulvous increasing in intensity along the lower border; ventral surface soiled white, the fur being basally very dark plumbeous and broadly tipped with yellowish white ; ears dark brown on both surfaces and very thinly haired, the surrounding fur concolorous with that of the anterior dorsal surface ; sides of nose and lower border of cheeks whitish gray with a faint tinge of yellowish; soles naked except the posterior third, dark flesh-color ; upper surface of fore and hind feet pale flesh-color, nearly white; tail one third or less than one third of the total length, well clothed, dusky brown above, sides and below white. Measurements. — Total length, 175 mm.; tail vertebrze, 60; hind foot, 26. Three other specimens (young adults) measure: Total length, 160 (150- 165); tail vertebree, 57 (50-60) ; hind foot, 25 (25-25). Skull.— Long and narrow, the interorbital and rostral portions especi- ally elongated ; postpalatal fossa narrow and v-shaped, but not quite so narrow and pointed in front as in Rethrodon cuniculordes ; front border of zygomatic plate as in Phyllotis, Oryzomys, etc., lacking the pointed superior process seen in Rezthrodon and Sigmodon, bulle small and pointed, as in Pxy/otts,; upper incisors deeply grooved; molars brachyo- dont as in Phylots,; but very broad and heavy —not hypsodont as in true Retthrodon,; lower jaw short and heavy, to support the thickened molars; posterior end of lower incisors encapsuled, forming a prominent process on the outer sides at the base of the condyloid process. Dimen- sions (type): Total length, 30.5; basal length, 26.5; zygomatic breadth, 17.5; interorbital breadth, 3.5, width of braincase, 14; length of nasals, 14; palatal length, 14.5; palatal foramina, 8; diastema, 8.5; upper molar series, 5.2; width of molar’, 1.8; lower jaw, length (inner base of incisors to posterior border of condyle), 18; height at condyle, 15; lower molar series, 5.5. Represented by four specimens, an adult female that had suckled young, and three younger specimens, nearly adult, all taken by Mr. Peterson, in the Cordilleras at the head of Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, Feb. 8-14, 1897. These specimens are all quite similar in coloration, except that the younger ones are grayer than the adults with much less fulvous suffusion, and with very little fulvous on the flanks and ventral surface. This species finds its nearest ally in Awneomys chinchilloides (Water- house), known thus far only from Tierra del Fuego, which it apparently closely resembles in size and coloration. 70 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Genus AKODON Meyen. Akodon Meyen, Nov. Act. Acad. Czs. Leop.-Carol., XVI, 1833, 599. Type, 4kodon bohiviense Meyen, sp. nov. Acodon Tschudi, Fauna Peruana, Mamm., 1844, 177. Emendation of Akodon.— Thomas, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (6), XIV, Nov., 1894, 360. “Syn. Habrothrix, Waterh. 1837.” Abrothrix Waterhouse, P. Z. S., 1837, 21 (subgenus of Mus). Type, Mus (Abrothrix) longipilis Waterh., sp. nov.—Gray, Cat. Mam. Br. Mus., 1843, 114 (full genus).—Thomas, P. Z. S., 1884, 450 (sub- genus of Hfesperomys); P. Z. S., 1896, 1020 (full genus). Chelemys Thomas, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), OX wAtios: G03) 242 (subgenus of 4kodon). Type, Hesperomys megalonyx Waterhouse. The genus ‘4kodon, as currently limited, includes nearly one hundred species, covering quite a diversity of forms, which differ in size, texture of pelage, coloration, and proportion of parts, and it will doubtless be found advisable to divide the group, when better known, into a number of sub- genera, although in cranial and dental characters there is great uniformity of structure, and no very evident lines of division. In general they are heavy-bodied, short-limbed, short-tailed, vole-like mice, with ears small to medium, pelage generally soft and full but sometimes short and velvety, and claws of ordinary size or strongly developed and fossorial. The color above varies from mouse-gray to dark brown, with or without reddish brown on the back, or nearly uniform dark. yellowish brown; the ventral surface varies from white or whitish gray to dark gray, or, as in the 4. caliginosus group, to nearly as dark as the color of the back. In the 2. pulcherrimus group there is a distinct pattern of white markings on the sides of the head, nearly enclosing the ears. The species vary in size from the size of a house mouse to that of the larger species of Microtus. The teeth vary little in structure, but very much, relatively, in size, some of the fossorial forms, like 4. macronyx, having much heavier dental armature, relative to the size of the animal, than the 4. xanthorhinus group. Sufficient material is not at present available for a critical revision of the group, which evidently may be divided for convenience into several fairly well-marked sections, characterized mainly by external characters. Mr. Thomas has already separated the big-clawed Akodonts as a sub- ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. ye genus, Chelemys, with A. megalonyx (Waterhouse) as the type, to include A. macronyx and A. vestitus Thomas. Another natural group, of at least subgeneric value, consists of 4. caliginosus (Tomes), 4. uriché All. & Chapm., 4. tvasu and A. venezuelensis Allen, A. teguina (Alston), etc. ; A. pulcherrimus, with its large ears and striking color-pattern, is possibly also separable from such forms as 4. canescens, 4. xanthorhinus and their allies. For the purpose of convenient comparison, figures are given of the skull and dentition of several of the leading types of hodon on plates XI and XII of this work, namely, 4. xauthorhinus, A. canescens, A. caliginosus, A. pulchervrimus, A. suffusus, and A. vestitus. The genus 4kodon has a wide geographical distribution, being repre- sented from Costa Rica southward to the Straits of Magellan, and is especially prolific in specific and subspecific forms throughout the Andean region. It is represented in the collections made in Southern Patagonia by the Princeton University Patagonia Expeditions by five species, four of which— 4. xanthorhinus, A. canescens, A. suffusus and A. vestitus — are each represented by large series of specimens, while the fifth, 4. m7- chelsent, by a single excellent skin, without, however, the skull. Besides these Philippi described in 1900 a Mus pachycephalus, which appears to be an £odon, with the statement “ Habitat in Freto Magel- lanico”’; but the description is not satisfactory, and the species is not here formally included. AKODON XANTHORHINUS (Waterhouse). Mus xanthorhinus Waterhouse, P. Z. S., Nov. 21, 1637, 17; Zool: Voyage Beagle, Mamm., 1839, 53, pl. xvii, fig. 1 (animal). “Hardy Peninsula, Tierra del Fuego (February).” Fesperomys (Habrothrix) xanthorhinus Thomas, P. Z. S., 1881, 5, part; the Sandy Point specimen only. Adult (January). — Above dull yellowish brown, closely resembling July specimens of 4. canescens; underparts whitish gray; nose, feet, and tail also similar to these parts in canescens—pale rusty fulvous. Measurements. — Adult male, Punta Arenas, Chili, Jan. 1, 1898: Total length, 151 mm.; tail vertebrae, 62; hind foot, 20. Skull (4 adults), total length, 25 (24.6—25.3); greatest width of brain case, 11.35 (11-11.6). This species is represented by 10 specimens collected by Mr. Colburn, 72 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. about January 1, 1898, at Punta Arenas, of which 7 are adult and 3 im- mature. Only one of the adults has measurements or is marked for sex. The species is entirely unrepresented in the large series (about 100 speci- mens) of Akodonts collected by Colburn and Peterson in the Santa Cruz region of Patagonia, and I very much doubt whether it is found there. These specimens are all in thin summer pelage, and are thus compar- able with the gray phase of 4. canescens, which is the corresponding sea- sonal pelage of that species. They are thus readily distinguishable in coloration when specimens of corresponding seasons are compared, but summer specimens of 4. xanthorhinus have a general resemblance in coloration to winter specimens of 4. canescens. But A. xanthorhinus is much the larger animal, although the proportions are similar. The skull, however, is not only larger (averaging about 3 mm. longer), but has the rostral portion of the skull relatively much more attenuated, it being more than one half of the basal length of the skull instead of less than one half, as in 4. canescens. These specimens agree with Waterhouse’s description and type, and there can be no question of their correct iden- tification. In the original description of 4. xanthorhinus (2. c.) the type locality is given as ‘Santa Cruz,” but in the ‘‘ Voyage of the Beagle” (Z.c.) it is given as ‘“‘ Hardy Peninsula, Tierra del Fuego,” where also Darwin states: ‘This species was caught on the mountains, thickly covered with peat, of Hardy Peninsula, which forms the extreme southern point of Tierra del Fuego.” This seems to settle the case beyond question that Hardy Peninsula and not Santa Cruz is the type locality of 4. xanthorhinus. Mr. Waterhouse further says (2 ¢., p. 55): ‘The specimens of this animal [17 xantho- rhinus|are both from Patagonia; one of the specimens of A/ws xanthorhinus was brought by Mr. Darwin from Tierra del Fuego; and as the other formed part of Captain King’s collection, it in all probability came from the same locality.”’ Waterhouse had, curiously, an old and young specimen each of A/us xanthorhinus and M. canescens, of the former one specimen is still ex- tant in the British Museum, but the other seems to have been lost, although, as noted below (p. 73), both specimens of JZ canescens stillremain. The specimen of JZ xanthorhinus is B. M. No. 55—12—24—156, and is labelled “ Hardy Peninsula, Ex. Coll. C. Darwin,” and should of course stand as the type. ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. 73 Mr. Waterhouse seems to have been in doubt as to whether JZ xan- thorhinus and M. canescens were really distinct species. He says in the ‘‘ Voyage of the Beagle” (2. c., p. 54): “It was with some hesitation that I described this [AZ canescens] as a distinct species in the Society’s Pro- ceedings. I have now re-examined the specimens, and still am unable to satisfy myself whether they are varieties of Mas xanthorhinus or not. Both of Mus canescens and of Mus xanthorhinus, 1 have before me what I im- agine to be an adult and a young specimen. The adult and the young of WM. xanthorhinus agree in being of a yellowish-brown colour, and in hav- ing the muzzle and tarsi deep yellow; both specimens of Mus canescens are of a gray colour, with an indistinct yellow wash, the muzzle and tarsi being tinted with yellow, as in JZ xanthorhinus.’ These are just the differences, as shown by the present material, that distinguish the two species, as regards coloration. But there is considerable difference in size, xanthorhinus being the larger, especially as shown by the skull, as already stated, which also differs markedly in form in the two species. In examining the types of these species in the British Museum, in July, 1901, I found that they had been misassigned, the two specimens of Water- house's Mus canescens having been identified, respectively, as the types of M. canescens and M. xanthorhinus, the Port Desire specimens being designated as the type of AZ canescens, and the Santa Cruz specimen as the type of 7. xanthorhinus, while the Hardy Peninsula specimen, the real type of IZ xanthorhinus was not designated as a type. This probably explains the record made, on the authority of Mr. Thomas, in Milne-Edward’s report on the mammals collected by the Mission Scien- tifique du Cap Horn (Mammals, p. 28), of specimens of Ahodon xantho- vhinus from Santa Cruz, Patagonia, which record is only intelligible on the basis of the above explained misidentification of Waterhouse’s type. AKODON CANESCENS (Waterhouse). Mus canescens Waterhouse, P. Z. S., Nov. 21, 1837, 17; Zodl. Voyage Beagle, Mamm., 1839, 54. Port Desire. Flesperomys (Calomys) canescens Burmeister, Descrip. phys. Rép. Argen- tine, IIT, 1879;.227 (ex Waterhouse). flesperomys (Habrothrix) xanthorhinus Thomas, in Milne-Edwards, Miss. Scient. du Cap Horn, VI, Zoologie, Mamm., 1890, p: 28; pl.-vi, fig. I, animal. Santa Cruz de Patagonie. 74 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Akodon canescens Thomas, P. Z. S., 1898, 211, Chubut, E. Patagonia. Adult (March and April).—General color above gray, faintly suffused with fulvous and varied slightly with black-tipped hairs ; below whitish gray, the basal portion of the fur plumbeous, the tips whitish; sides and front of nose pale rusty fulvous ; ears rusty brown ; upper surface of fore and hind feet yellowish white or pale rusty fulvous ; tail rather indistinctly bicolor, darker above and lighter below, with usually a faint rusty tinge throughout. The ventral surface and sides are often faintly washed with pale fulvous. Half grown young are almost indistinguishable in coloration from the adults. Adult (July). —Pelage longer and fuller, and general coloration above yellowish gray-brown, the general tone darker and browner than in April specimens; under parts whiter and with rarely any tinge of buff; sides of nose more rusty, and upper surface of feet more buffy. The difference be- tween the gray summer pelage and the darker and more fulvous brown win- ter pelage is quite strongly shown in March, April and July specimens from practically the same locality. The two series from the Rio Coy, consisting of five specimens taken in November and others taken the last of August, well show the two pelages, and indicate that the gray pelage is worn from about November till May, and the brown pelage from about June to September as is further shown by specimens from the vicinity of Cape Fairweather. Measurements.— Many of the specimens are more or less immature. Throwing out these, save possibly a few young adults, the series, collected and measured by Mr. Colburn, gives the following: 16 males, total length, 132 mm. (125-140, with one reaching 150); tail vertebrz, 50.9 (50-55) ; hind foot, 19.7 (19-20): 16 females, total length, 135.3 (125-145); tail vertebree, 50 (45-55); hind foot, 20 (19-20). Fully adult specimens ap- pear to rarely fall below 130 mm. in total length, and very few exceed 140 mm. Seven males and four females collected and measured by Mr. Peterson, from the upper Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, give similar results, as fol- lows: 7 males, total length, 136 (125-151); tail vertebrae, 50 (46-54), hind foot, 20 (18-21): 4 females, total length, 137 (126-148); tail verte- bree, 50.7 (45-55); hind foot, 20 (20-20). Thirteen specimens from Cape Fairweather, all males, collected and ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. 75 measured by Mr. Peterson, give the following: Total length, 125.4 (120- 135); tail vertebrae, 45.6 (42-51); hind foot, 20.4 (20-21). Eight speci- mens from Coy Inlet, collected and measured by Mr. Peterson, all males but one: Total length, 138.5 (130-144); tail vertebrae, 52 (43-60) ; hind foot, 20 (19-20). The principal measurements of 4 adult skulls are: Total length, 22.9 (22.3-24); greatest width of brain case, 10.8 (10.7-11). Represented by 95 specimens, collected partly in the coast region and partly on the upper Rio Chico and the plains southeast of Lake Buenos Aires. The coast specimens comprise 4 taken near Mount Observation, February 21, by Mr. Colburn, and 35 from points further southward, taken by Mr. Peterson, as follows: Rio Gallegos, 2 specimens, May 23; Halliday Ranch, mouth of the Rio Gallegos, 3 specimens, June 24; Cape Fairweather, 13 specimens (all males), July 5-13; Rudd Ranch, near Cape Fairweather, 8 specimens, July 27 and 28; Coy Inlet, 9 specimens, August 8 and 31, September 1, and November 7-11. The specimens from the interior include 14 specimens collected on the upper Rio Chico, by Mr. Peterson, January 31 (7 specimens), February 3-6 (5 specimens), and March 26 (2 specimens) ; and 34 collected by Mr. Colburn at Basalt Cafions, April 8-28, and 5 at Swan Lake (March 18-20 and May 4 and 15). The summer and fall specimens from the interior are darker and grayer and much less fulvous than the winter specimens from the coast, but there are enough specimens collected at intermediate dates to show that the difference is, almost beyond question, seasonal and not geographical. The species thus seems to range across southern Patagonia from Cape Fairweather to the Cordilleras. It was not, however, obtained by Mr. Colburn at Punta Arenas, where he collected only 4. xanthorhinus. The two specimens on which the species was originally based by Waterhouse were collected by Darwin, one at Port Desire and the other at Santa Cruz. Only Port Desire is mentioned in the original descrip- tion, but in the Voyage of the ‘“‘ Beagle” (Mamm., /. c.) the “habitat” is givenas ‘Santa Cruz and Port Desire (December).”’ Both these specimens are still preserved in the British Museum and have been compared with a large number of specimens from the present series. These types are Nos. ‘'55-12-24-157. Loc. Santa Cruz, Ex Coll. C. Darwin,” and ‘55—12—24- 143. Loc. Port Desire, Ex Coll. Ch. Darwin,” marked as the type of 4. 76 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. canescens. The other is mistakably identified as the type of 4. xantho- rhinus, as already noted under that species. Akodon canescens is closely related to A. arenicola (Waterhouse), based on specimens from Maldonaldo, at the mouth of the La Plata, but it differs from it in smaller size, more grayish coloration, and yellowish muzzle. Two specimens collected by Mr. Durnford at Chubut are referred by Mr. Thomas (Z c.) to this species. Mr. Durnford, in his field notes published by Mr. Thomas, says it is ‘common in straw-heaps and grana- ries,’ and that it ‘‘burrows in the ground, or more usually takes posses- sion of some of the numerous cracks which may always be found in the earth, and appropriates them for its home. It has five or six young at a birth.” AKODON suFFUSUS Thomas. (Plates XI, Fig. 5, Skull; XII, Figs. 9 and 10, Teeth.) ? Hesperomys (Habrothrix) longipilis Milne-Edwards, Miss. Scient. du Cap Horn, VI, Zodél., Mamm., 1890, 28, pl. v, fig. 2, animal. ‘Santa Cruz de Patagonie.”’ Acodon suffusus Thomas, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), XII, Aug., 1903, 241. “Valle del Lago Blanco, Southern Chubut (Cordillera region).” Median upper surface, from between the eyes to base of tail, dark dull reddish brown; sides of head and body gray, passing gradually into the reddish brown of the back and into the grayish white of the ventral sur- face, which extends unusually high up on the sides of the body and cheeks; ventral surface white or grayish white, the pelage plumbeous at the base, in some specimens wholly concealed by the long white tips of the hairs; facial region anterior to the eyes gray like the sides of the body with a faint tinge of brown; ears covered with very short brownish hairs externally, nearly naked internally; tail bicolor, reddish brown above, whitish below, heavily clothed with short hairs; fore feet dingy soiled yellowish gray above, palms naked, flesh color; hind feet soiled whitish, soles naked, dusky brown. Measurements. — Average and extreme measurements of 13 males: Total length, 170 mm. (165-178) ; tail vertebra, 70 (65-74); hind foot, 25 (25-26). The females are slightly larger, 8 females measuring as follows: Total length, 176.6 (170-188) ; tail vertebra, 71.8; hind foot, 25. An average adult skull measures as follows: Total length, 30; basal length, 25; length of nasals, 11; palatal length, 12; palatal foramina, ee — ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. WA 6.3; diastema, 7.2; upper molars, 4; greatest breadth, 13; interorbital breadth, 5. This species is represented by 35 specimens, five of which are from the Rio Coy, and the rest, except two from the upper Rio Chico, near or within the Cordilleras, two being from the Pacific slope of the Cordilleras ; all were collected by Mr. Peterson. The Rio Coy specimens were taken in November, the Rio Chico specimens at various dates from January 31 to March 4. Two additional specimens were taken by Mr.’ Colburn, one at Swan Lake, March 14, and the other at the Basalt Cafions, April 30. The several half grown young in the series are similar in coloration to the adults, except that the brown of the upper parts is rather duller. The adults are very uniform in coloration. In Patagonia this species ranges, as shown by the present material, from the coast region westward into the eastern base of the Andes, and probably thence northward. Mr. Peterson refers to it as one of the most common species of the upper Rio Chico region, frequenting the edge of the timber as well as the more open grassy country. He states that the ‘skin always adheres to the tail very firmly in adults,” and most of the specimens show that the skin of the tail was split open to remove it and afterwards sewed up. Before the present material came into my hands a number of specimens of this species were sent to Mr. Oldfield Thomas for determination, and he identified them as his 4kodon hirtus. When at the British Museum in 1got, I made direct comparison of a number of specimens with the type and paratype of 4. fzrtus. In writing up the history of this species in 1902, under the name 4kodon hirtus, | made the following comment on the case: ‘““ Akodon hirtus was based on two specimens collected at San Rafael, Mendoza, by Mr. Bridges many years ago, the type and paratype having been skinned from alcoholic specimens. The skins cannot, therefore, be trusted as regards color; they agree, however, as closely with the upper Rio Chico specimens as could be expected, and the skulls present no appreciable differences. It should be noted, however, that the type locality of the species is about 1,000 miles directly north of the upper Rio Chico region, and it seems more than probable that comparison of a good series of freshly collected skins from the two localities would reveal appreciable differences. The tabulation of the measurements (summarized above) for use in the present connection shows that the dimensions given by Mr. 78 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Thomas for his type of 4. Azrvfus are much larger (total length 197) than the very largest of a series of over 20 adults from the Rio Chico country. The measurements of the type skull, however, do not exceed those of average adults from the Rio Chico. For the present I follow Mr. Thomas in identifying the Rio Chico specimens, quite a number of which have passed through his hands, with 4. hzrtus.”’ Since the above was written, however, Mr. Thomas has described an Akodon suffusus from a point quite near the Rio Chico region and in quite similar country, and, in the absence of authentic specimens of 2. suffusus for comparison, it seems quite beyond question that the present series Should be referred to 4. suffusus rather than to 4. Airtus, described from a point so much further north and from a markedly different region. Mr. Thomas, in describing 4. suffusus, says: ‘‘Closely allied to 4. hir- tus, Thos., but the general colour stronger, the belly lighter, and with certain cranial differences detailed below.” These are: “Skull in general shape like that of 4. Azrtus, not elongated as in 4. Jongipils. But it is rather lower and flatter throughout, less rounded and convex along the middle line, especially in the interorbital region.” I am also indebted to Mr. Thomas for the suggestion, made some time ago, that Hesperomys (Habrothrix) longipilis of Milne-Edwards, as cited above, is probably his 4kodon hirtus of later date —now 4. sauffusus. Subgenus CHELEMys Thomas. Chelemys Thomas, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), XII, Aug., 1903, 242. Type, Hesperomys megalonyx Waterhouse. ‘General characters, skull, and dentition as in 4kodon, but the claws, especially the anterior ones, very large, fossorial. . . . ‘‘Now that the known species have been so considerably multiplied, it seems convenient to have a subgeneric name by which to designate what have hitherto been termed the ‘long-clawed Akodons.’’’— Thomas, Z c. Mr. Thomas formally refers to this subgenus three species, 4hodon megalonyx (the type), 4. macronyx, and A. vestitus. AKODON (CHELEMYS) VESTITUS Thomas. (Plates XI, Fig. 5, Skull; XII, Figs. 9 and 10, Teeth.) Akodon (Chelemys) vestttus Thomas, Ann. & Mag. Hist. (7), XII, Aug., 1903, 242, ‘‘ Valle del Lago, Cordillera region of Southern Chubut Territory, Patagonia.”’ ey ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA:. 79 Adult (February). — Pelage full, soft and long. Above nearly uniform hair brown with a slight yellowish suffusion; sides of head and body and under parts whitish gray, the plumbeous underfur nearly concealed by the long white tips of the hairs; ears small, thickly clothed with short hairs of the color of the dorsal surface; tail short, well clothed, bicolor, brown above and whitish gray below; upper surface of fore and hind feet soiled whitish with a faint tinge of flesh-color, palms and soles naked, the former yellowish flesh-color, the latter similar but slightly darker. Measurements. — Four adult males measure: Total length, 174 mm.; tail vertebre, 52; hind foot, 25.5. Three adult females measure: Total length, 174 (168-180); tail vertebr, 47 (45-50) ; hind foot, 25.3 (25-26). The longest fore claws have a length of 6 to 7 mm., the longest hind claws measure 4 to 5 mm. Skull (adult female): Total length, 30; basal length, 26; greatest breadth, 14; interorbital breadth, 5; length of nasals, 12; palatal length, 13; diastema, 8; palatal foramina, 7; upper molars, 5. This species is represented by 9 specimens taken on the upper Rio Chico, near the Cordilleras, in February, 1897, by Mr. O. A. Peterson. They are all adult and very uniform in coloration, but vary a little in gen- eral tone, from yellowish brown to reddish brown. Its nearest known relative is the _4. macronyx Thomas, decribed from the “east side of the Andes, near Fort San Rafael, Province of Mendoza,” with which Mr. Thomas thus compares it: “General appearance and pro- portions very much as in 4.:(C.) macronyx Thos., but colour darker, tail more distinctly bicolor, and skull broader and flatter.’ He says further: “This species is the southern representative of 4. macronyx Thos., to which it is no doubt very nearly allied; but the fresh series now avail- able indicates that it should have a name of its own.” Specimens from the Rio Chico, Cordilleras, Patagonia, were sent some years ago by Dr. Merriam to Mr. Thomas for identification, and were labelled by him as “ 4hodon macronyx, Thos.” With these specimens before me, I accepted this identification in preparing my account of this species, written two years ago, but added: “The type locality of this species [4. macronyx] is near Mendoza, nearly a thousand miles to the northward, and in all probability the southern form here described will prove separable from true 4. macronyx, at least as a subspecies, on com- parison with a good series of Mendoza specimens.” Being without ma- 80 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. terial for comparison, however, it did not seem desirable to make the separation suggested, and which Mr. Thomas has since made. AKODON (CHELEMYS) MICHAELSENI (Matschie). Hesperomys (Acodon) michaelsent Matschie, Hamburger Magalhaensische Sammelreise, Saug., 1898, 5, pl. figs. 1, 1 a@-#, animal, ear, hand and foot, and skull. ‘“Siid. Patagonien, Punta Arenas.’’— Thomas, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), XII, Aug., 1903, 343 (in text, suggest- ing it is probably a Votiomys). Adult (January).— Pelage short, thick, soft. Above uniform dusky brown; ventral surface similar but lighter with a slightly grayish instead of brownish hue. Ears short, wholly concealed in the fur; upper surface of fore feet rusty brown; of hind feet dull brown, witha slightly rusty tone. Claws of fore feet very long, as in 4. megalonyx. Measurements. — Total length, 142 mm.; head and body, 97; tail, 45; hind foot (without claws), 19; ear, 11. Skull, total length, 27.6; basal length, 24; greatest breadth, 13.4; interorbital breadth, 4.8; length of nasals, 12; palatal length, 11; diastema, 7; palatal foramina, 5.6: upper molar series 3.5. (Measurements from Dr. Matschie, Z c.) Represented by a single specimen, without skull or measurements, of apparently an adult male, taken Jan. 1, 1898, by Mr. Colburn at Punta Arenas, the type locality of the species. In size, proportions, and texture of pelage it closely resembles 4kodon megalonyx, but differs in its very much darker coloration, both above and below. Its identity with Dr. Matschie’s Akodon michaelsent, described and figured from a single female specimen, also taken at Punta Arenas, is almost beyond question, as is also its distinctness from 4. megalonyx. The species is apparently thus far known only from the specimens here mentioned. It is here referred to the subgenus Che/emys with some hesi- tation. Mr. Thomas (/ c.) has recently suggested that it may be refera- ble to Votomys. Genus NOTIOMYS Thomas. Notiomys Thomas, in Milne-Edwards, Miss. Scient. du Cap. Horn, VI, Zool., Mamm., 1890, 24. Subgenus of Hesperomys. Type, Hes- eromys (Notiomys) edwardsit Thomas, sp. nov.— Thomas, P. Z.S., 1896, 1020 (full genus). ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURID. 81 The genus /Votomys appears to have been based mainly on the char- acter of the feet, notably the presence of strongly developed claws on the fore feet, and the small size of the ears. In remarking upon its affinities Mr. Thomas says : | “Le Notiomys offre dans son organisation une combinaison de carac- teres empruntés a divers sous-genres d’Hesferomys. Ainsi, par son aspect extérieur il ressemble aux Ca/omys, par ses griffes allongées aux Onychomys, par la griffe dont le pouce est pourvu aux Scapferomys et aux Oxymycterus. D’autre part, par la structure de son crane et de ses dents, il se rapproche des Hladvothrix dont on doit le considérer comme trés voisin, malgré les différences extérieures que l’on constate. La nécessité d’établir pour cet animal une distinction subgénérique ne peut étre mise en doute et peut-étre méme, quand on aura pu étudier des exem- plaires conservés dans l’esprit-de-vin, reconnaitra-t-on la nécessité de le placer au rang de genre distinct.” NVotiomys is more closely related to 4kodon than to any other genus, it closely approaching the subgenus C#e/emys, and presenting only a superficial resemblance to either Oxymycterus or Scapteronzys, judging by the description and figures of the only known specimen of /Votzomys. The skull is rather broad and short, with a broad rostrum, broad and short palatal foramina, and not very heavy dentition, judging by Milne-Edwards’s figures (/.c., pl. viii, figs. 1-1@), —features quite unlike those found in the smaller species of Oxymycterus. The palatal foramina end considerably in front of the first molars, instead of extending posteriorly to about the middle or posterior third of these teeth, as in most species of Akodon and Oxymycterus, and more resembling the condition commonly seen in Oryzomys. The principal characters of /Vofomys would therefore seem to be the long fore claws, small ears, and short, broad palatine foramina, combined with the usual cranial and dental characters of 4kodon. Notiomys EDWARpsII (Thomas). Hesperomys (Notiomys) edwards Thomas, in Milne-Edwards, Miss. Scient. du Cap Horn, VI, Zoologie, Mamm., 1890, 24, pl. iii, fig. 1, animal, pl. viii, fig. 1, skull. ‘‘ Patagonie, au sud de Santa Cruz, vers le 50° degré de latitude Sud.” Notiomys edwardstt Trouessart, Cat. Mamm., ii, 1897, 540, ex Thomas, as above. 82 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Similar in size and general appearance to E/igmodontia lepida (Thomas), but easily distinguished by the much larger claws on the fore feet. Above grayish fawn color, below white; tail short, covered with short close hairs, concealing the annulations, pale fawn above and white below. Front feet armed with long, fossorial claws, similar to those of kodon (Chelemys) macronyx ; Claws of hind feet rather long ; soles naked, flesh-color; ears small. Measurements. — Total length, 115 mm.; head and body, 80; tail ver- tebrae, 35. Skull, total length, 20; greatest breadth, 13; length of nasals, 9.7; palatal length, 11; diastema, 6.1; upper molar series, 3.2. Descrip- tion abridged from Thomas (7 c.). This small species appears to be still known only from the unique type, collected by Mr. Lebrun, a little southward of Santa Cruz (lat. 50° S.), Patagonia. It is not included in the very large series of Muridz collected near the type locality by the Princeton Expeditions, and it is therefore probably not numerously represented. Genus OXYMYCTERUS Waterhouse. Oxymycterus Waterhouse, P. Z. S., 1837, 21. Subgenus of Mus. Type, Mus (Oxymycterus) nasutus Waterhouse.—Tomes, P. Z. S., 1861, 285 (full genus).— Thomas, P. Z. S., 1884, 450 (subgenus of /Yes- peromys); P. Z. S., 1896, 308 (full genus). The chief characters of Oxymycferus are the long narrow rostrum, rela- tively narrow interorbital region with evenly rounded supraorbital edges, the maxillary branch of the zygoma narrow with its antero-superior border rounded, fossorial claws, and small ears. There is nothing very char- acteristic in the structure of the molars to distinguish it from 4kodon and allied genera. The group contains at present some 15 to 20 species, ranging from the Andean region eastward and southward over southern Brazil to Patagonia. They vary greatly in size, and somewhat in other features. Thus O. fanosus is but little larger than a house mouse, while O. cuca, O. juliace and O. aficafis are as large as a half-grown house rat, with other species intermediate in size. The whole dentition, incisors as well as molars, is weak in all, but in the smaller species is apparently even more reduced than in the larger forms, but the maxillary branch of the zygoma is rela- tively broader and less rounded on the upper anterior border than in the ALLEN: MAMMALIA: MURIDA. : 83 larger forms. O. apzca/is is an aberrant member of the group, as regards its external characters, having non-fossorial claws and peculiar pelage. The present collection includes two species referable to Oxymycterus, namely, O. davzosus Thomas and O. macrotis Allen. They are both small forms, with fossorial claws and small ears, with the teeth and general form of the skull of the larger species of Oxymeycferus, but with very small teeth and a relatively wider and less rounded zygomatic plate. The single skull of O. /avosus (the specimen was identified by Mr. Oldfield Thomas) has no trace of an interparietal, which would thus seem to ally it with Blarinomys. In the accompanying plates (Pl. IX, Figs. 3-6, Pl. X, Figs. 6-10), the skull and dentition is presented, for convenience of comparison, of five species of Oxymycterus, including such diverse forms, as O. /anosus, O. macrotis, O. inca, O. juliace and O. apicalis. OxYMYCTERUS LANOSUS Thomas. Hesperomys (Habrothorix) xanthorhinus Thomas, P. Z. S., 1881, 5, part; only the specimen from Monteith Bay. Oxymycterus lanosus Thomas, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (6), XX, Aug., ’ 1897, 218. Monteith Bay, Straits of Magellan. Adult (February). — With a striking similarity to 4kodon xanthorhinus in size, proportions and coloration, but with much smaller ears, and softer and much thicker pelage. Color above deep yellowish brown, varied with blackish; below grayish white; nose not yellowish as in the 4. xanthorhinus group; upper surface of feet soiled yellowish white; tail bicolor, brownish above, whitish gray below; ears small, slightly over- topping the fur, scarcely different in coloration from the surrounding pelage. Measurements. — Adult male: Total length, 127 mm.; tail vertebrae (mutilated in life), 40; hind foot 20. Adult female: Total length, 145; tail vertebra, 55; hind foot 20. Skull, adult female: Total length, 24.6; basal length, 21; greatest breadth, 11.8; interorbital breadth, 4; length of nasals, 10; palatal length, 9.5; diastema, 6; palatal foramina, 5.2; upper molar series, 3.5. There is no interparietal. This species is represented by only two specimens, collected on the upper Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, in the Cordilleras, by Mr. Peterson, Feb. 10, 1897. Both specimens have been identified as this species by Mr. 84 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Thomas, the type locality of which is Monteith Bay, Straits of Magellan. Not compared by me with the type. Mr. Peterson’s notes state that both specimens, a pair, were caught together “in heavy grass and brush, near a small brook.” This species, if properly referable to Oxymycterus, is the smallest mem- ber of the genus, so far as at present known, being considerably smaller even than O. mzcrots. OXYMYCTERUS MICROTIS Allen. (Plates IX, Fig. 4, Skull; X, Fig. 7, Teeth.) Oxymycterus macrotis Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIX, 189, May 9, 1903. Pacific slope of Cordilleras, upper Rio Chico de Santa Cruz, Patagonia. — Thomas, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), XII, Aug., 1903, 243 (in text, suggesting its reference to otiomys). Adult male (type), March. — Pelage thick, short, and fine, almost mole- like in character. Pelage and general color almost exactly as in Oxy- mycterus lanosus Thomas, but twice the size of that species, with tail one half shorter and fore claws large, fossorial. Above dark yellowish brown ; underparts whitish gray, the plumbeous underfur tinging the otherwise whitish surface; top and sides of nose dark grayish brown, without any tinge of yellow or rufous; ears very small, scarcely reaching the surface of the short fur, concolorous with the enclosing fur; tail very short, but little exceeding the length of the hind foot, very thickly clothed, dark brown, only slightly lighter below than above; upper surface of feet gray- ish brown, the toes lighter, yellowish white; soles naked, dark flesh-color. A second spceimen is exactly similar in coloration, except that the ven- tral surface has a slight wash of buff, apparently due to staining. Measurements. — Total length (type), 138 mm.; tail vertebrae, 28; hind foot, 21; longest fore claw, 6. Skull, total length, 27.6; basal length, 23.6; zygomatic breadth, 12.5 ; width of brain case, 12; interorbital breadth, 5 ; length of nasals, 10.5; palatal length, 10; palatal foramina, 5; diastema, 6.3; upper molar series, 3.5 ; length of lower jaw (inner base of incisors to posterior border of condyle), 15; height at condyle, 5.5; lower molar Series, 3.4. Represented by two specimens —a skin and skull, and a skin and skeleton — collected on the Pacific Slope of the Cordilleras, at the head of the Rio Chico de Santa Cruz. ALLEN: MAMMALIA: PHOCIDA. * 85 Externally Oxymycterus microtis is a miniature of Akodon macronyx with a relatively much shorter tail. It exactly resembles in coloration above and in the texture of the pelage Oxymycterus lanosus, but the latter has whiter under parts, is very much smaller, has a much longer tail, and small, non-fossorial claws; but the skulls of the two are very similar in general contour, differing only in size and slightly in details. O. microtis thus combines the large fossorial claws of the Shodon (Chelemys) ma- cronyx group with the cranial characters and weak dentition of the O. lanosus type. The narrow line separating 4kodon and Oxymycterus is thus still further narrowed by the present annectent link. Since the foregoing description was published Mr. Oldfield Thomas (2. c.) has expressed the opinion that, “From the descriptions given it seems not impossible that both ‘ Hesferomys (Acodon) Michaelseni,’ Matchie, and ‘ Oxymycterus microtis, Allen, belong to Votomys, as their long claws, short tails, and very small molars agree precisely with what is found in that group.” With the skull and skins of O. mucropus before me, however, I see no reason for not viewing the species as far better referable to Oxymycterus than to Notiomys, judging Notiomys by the published figures of the species, including the skull. Order FERZ. Suborder Prynipepia. Family PHOCID A. The Phocids or Earless Seals are represented in the southern hemi- sphere by five species, referable to as many genera, of which three have been recorded from the Straits of Magellan, the coast of Patagonia, or the Falkland Islands, and hence come within the limits of the present treatise. These are the Leopard Seal (Aydrurga leptonyx), Weddell’s Seal (Lepfonychotes weddellit), and the Sea Elephant (Afirounga leoninus). There is also a record of the capture of several examples of the Crab- eating Seal (Lododon carcinophaga) near San Isidro, a few miles north of the city of Buenos Aires ;' but otherwise than this both this species and Ross’s Seal (Ommatophoca vosstwt) are known only from the Vicinity of the pack-ice of the antarctic seas. Although the occurrence of Lobodon ‘Berg, Com. Mus. Buenos Aires, I, 1898, p. 15. 86 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. carcinophaga in the Rio de la Plata must have been entirely fortuitous, this species is here included, since its capture there in several instances im- plies its occasional occurrence on the coast of Patagonia. Genus HYDRURGA Gistel. Stenorhingue F. Cuvier, Mém. du Mus., XI, 1824, 190. Stenorhinchus F. Cuvier, Dict. des Sci. Nat., XX XIX, 1826, 549. Type and only species, Phoca leptonyx Blainville. Stenorhyncus F. Cuvier, Dict. des Sci. Nat., LIX, 1829, 463 (same as above). Stenorhynchus Lesson, Man. Mamm., 1827, 199. Stenorhincus McMurtrie, Cuvier’s An. Kingd., abr. ed., 1834, 71. ‘“Hydrurga Gistel, Naturg. Thierreichs, 1848, p. xi.’ —T. S. Palmer, Science, n. ser., X, No. 249, Oct. 6, 1899, 494; Index Gen. Mamm., 1904, 337. Ogmorhinus Peters, Monatsb. Akad. Berlin, 1875, 393, footnote. New name for Stenxorhynchus, preoccupied in carcinology and entomology. Stenorhynchotes Turner, Zool. Challenger Exp., pt. Ixviii, 1888, 63, foot- note. Not adopted, but mentioned as a modification of Stexorhyn- chus that could have been advantageously adopted in place of Ogmorhinus. As has long been known, the generic name Stenorhinchus F. Cuvier, 1826, modified by Lesson in 1827 to Stexorhynchus, and by its proposer, in 1829, to Stexorhyncus, is preoccupied by Stexorhyuchus Lamark, 1818, for a genus of Crustacea, and again in 1823, and still again in 1825, for - different genera of insects. On this account Peters in 1875 proposed to replace it with Ogmorhinus. But there appears to have been already an earlier name than Ogmorhinus, as recently shown by Palmer, namely, flydrurga Gistel, 1848, which should of course be adopted in place of Ogmorhinus. HYDRURGA LEPTONYX (Blainville). Sea lion from islands Falckland, Biainville, Journ. de Phys., XCI, Oct., 1820, 287, 288. Description of a skull in Museum of College of Surgeons, London, labelled as having come from ‘iles Falckland.” Phoca leptonyx Blainville, zbzd., 297, 298, fig. 5 of pl. published Dec., 1820. Stuffed specimen in collection of ‘‘M. Hauville, au Havre,’ ae reais 1 nail ; ~ ALLEN: MAMMALIA: PHOCIDA. ~ 87 with the same dentition as the skull described on pp. 287, 288. Also said to have come from the ‘environs des iles Falckland ou Malouines.”’ Phoca leptonyx Desmarest, Mamm., I, 1820, 247 (ex Blainville). See also note on p. 243, under Phoca leporina. —G. Cuvier, Ossem. foss., V,1, 1923, 207, pl: xvii, ig. 2. “Same specimen: Seal from New Georgia, Home, Philos. Trans., 1822, pt. i, 240, pl. xxix, skulls Wect: (Comp. Anat: Il;-1823;%118;1V,, 1824) pl) xx, skull The same skull described by Blainville, as coming from the Falk- land Islands, but here said to have come from the Island of New Georgia. Stenorhinchus leptonyx F. Cuvier, Dict. des Sci. Nat., XXXIX, 1826, 549. “Tles Malouines et de la Nouvelle-Géorgie.”” From Blainville and Home. Stenorhynchus leptonyx Lesson, Man. Mamm., 1820, 199.— Nilsson, Arch. f. Naturg., 1841, pt. i, 307.— Owen, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., XII, 1843, 232. Gray, Zod]. Erebus and Terror, Mamm., 1844, 6, pl. ili, animal, pl. iv, skull; Cat. Seals and Whales Brit. Mus., 1866, 16; and in his subsequent papers.—Jacquinot & Pucheran,. Voy. au Pole Sud, Zool., II], Mamm. et Ois., 1853, 27, ‘terres australes, au sud-est du cap Horn”; Atlas, 1842-1853 (circa 1842), pl. ix, animal and skull. — Abbott, P. Z. S., 1868, 192 (Falkland Islands). — Sclater, z6zd., p. 192, footnote, and p. 527 (Falkland Islands). — Cun- ningham, Nat. Hist. Strait Magellan, 1871, 182. Magellan Strait. — Flower, Cat. Osteol. Coll. Roy. Coll. Surgeons, II, 1884, 211. Tasmania, New Zealand, Falkland Islands, New Georgia (includes the Blainville and Home specimen). — Borchgrevinck, First on Ant- arctic Continent, 1901, 65, 170, 230, 236, near Victoria Land. Ogmorhinus leptonyx Peters, Monatsb. Akad. Berlin, 1875, 393. — Allen, N. Am. Pinnipeds, 1880, 466.—Turner, Zodl. Challenger Exp., pt. Ixviil, 1888, 64. — Barrett-Hamilton, Rep. Southern Cross Coll., 1g02, 23-34, exhaustive general account. — Wilson, zéza’., 71-73, distribu- tion and habits. — Bruce, Proc. Phys. Soc. Edinb., XII, 1892-1894 (1894), 380, near Graham Land; Rep. 63d Meet. Brit. Assoc., 1893 (1894), 807. — Bernacchi, To South Polar Regions, 1901, 319, 325, with text cuts of animal, from life. Ogmorhynus leptonyx Cook, First Antarctic Night, 1901, 256, 281, 383, animal, from photographs. 88 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Phoca homet Lesson, Dict. class. d’Hist. Nat., XIII, 1828, 417. New name for Phoca leptonyx Blainville. Flydrurga leptonyx R. J. Plocock], Rep. Southern Cross Coll., 1902, 26 (footnote). This species is unrepresented in the collections made by the Princeton University Expeditions to Patagonia, but it has been repeatedly recorded from the Falkland Islands. Dr. Sclater (P. Z. S., 1868, 527) states that Mr. A. A. Lecompte shot, in 1867, ‘‘a single Sea Leopard (Stenorhynchus leptonyx) in a remote part of Stanley Harbour, being the only specimen of this animal met with during his stay in the Falklands.”’ Captain C. C. Abbott (7 ¢., p. 192), during his residence there, met only a single speci- men, ‘‘washed ashore dead near Port Louis.’’ Mr. Barrett-Hamilton also records two skulls in the British Museum taken on the Falkland Islands, in the list of specimens given by him in his paper on the Mammalia of the Southern Cross Collections (pp. 32, 33). The several recent South Polar expeditions report this seal as found in some frequency on the pack-ice near Graham Land and Victoria Land, where it is the most numerous of the several species found in these high latitudes. It has been taken also at New Georgia and on the shores of New Zealand. | The type locality of Phoca /eptonyx Blainville may be considered as somewhat in doubt, as it is evident that the specimen described (Z c., pp. 297, 298) in connection with the bestowal of the name (on p. 298) must be considered as the type, rather than Blainville’s specimen No. 2 (2°. Sea lion from islands Falckland’’), described on pages 287 and 288. The former—the type specimen—he says ‘a été rapportée des mers du sud, et, 4 ce qu'il paroit, des environs des iles Falckland ou Malouines.” The other specimen, belonging to the “college des chirurgiens 4 Londres,” and labelled as from the Falkland Islands, was, two years later, described and figured by Home (4 c.) as a “Seal from New Georgia,” which place appears to have been the correct locality of the specimen.! It is apparently, therefore, fair to assume the Falkland Islands as the type locality rather than the Island of New Georgia. The history of this seal is very fully given by Mr. Barrett-Hamilton in "On this point see Barrett-Hamilton, who has gone into the history of these two important specimens in considerable detail in his Report on the Mammalia of the Southern Cross Expedi- tion (pp. 26, 27). ALLEN: MAMMALIA: PHOCIDA. 89 his report on the Mammalia of the Southern Cross Collections, includ- ing its bibliography, distribution, habits, external appearance, and cranial characters, which is admirably supplemented in the same work by Mr. Wilson’s summary of recent observations of the animal in life, based on the accounts of the various explorers who have met with it in the pack- ice of the Antarctic. Genus LEPTONYCHOTES Gill. Leptonyx Gray, Charlesworth’s Mag. Nat. Hist., I, Nov., 1837, 582. Type, Ofaria weddelli Lesson. Preoccupied in ornithology. Leptonychotes Gill, Arrang. Fam. Mamm., 1872, 70. New name for Leptonyx Gray, preoccupied.— Allen, N. Amer. Pinn., 1880, 418, 463, 467.—Turner, Zodl. Challenger Exped., pt. Ixvili, 1888, 20. — Barrett-Hamilton, Rep. Southern Cross Coll., 1902," 1:7; Pacilophoca Flower & Lydekker, Mamm. Liv. and Ext., 1891, 605. ' New name for Leffonyx Gray, preoccupied = Leptonychotes Gill, 1872. This genus was made known by Gray in 1837, on the basis of speci- mens obtained by Captain Fitzroy on the coast of Patagonia, more fully described and figured in 1844, in the “ Zo6élogy of the Erebus and Terror,” but he unfortunately adopted for it the preoccupied name Leffonyx, replaced by Gill in 1872 by Leptonychotes, and again in 1891 by Paeci/- ophoca proposed by Flower and Lydekker, apparently in ignorance of Leptonychotes Gill. LEPTONYCHOTES WEDDELLII (Lesson). Sea Leopard Weddell, Voy. towards the South Pole, 1825, 22, with plate of animal entitled ‘Sea Leopard of South Orkneys.” Otaria weddellit Lesson, Férussac’s Bull. Sci. Nat., VII, 1826, 437, 438. Based on the Sea Leopard of Weddell, as above (name spelled Otaria weddelit on p. 438). Stenorhyncus weddellii Lesson, Man. de Mamm., 1827, 200. Stenorhynchus weddellit Owen, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., XII, 1843, 332. —Gill, Proc. Essex Inst., V, 1866, 6. Leptonyx weddellii Gray, Charlesworth’s Mag. Nat. Hist., I, Nov., 1837, 582; List Mamm. Brit. Mus., 1843, 102; Zodl. Erebus and Terror, Mamm., 1844, 7, pl. v, animal, pl. vi, skull. Santa Cruz River, east coast of Patagonia, Capt. Fitzroy. Also of Gray’s later papers and works on Seals. — Hatcher, Narrative, 1903, 77. Corriken Aike. 90 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Leptonychotes weddellii Allen, N. Amer. Pinnipeds, 1880, 467.— Turner, Zool. Challenger Exp., pt. Ixviii, 1888, 20. Betsey Cove, Kergue- len. — Cook, First Antarctic Night, 1901, 265, 281, 283, animal, from photographs. — Albert, Act. Soc. scient. du Chili, XI, Dec., 1901, 221 (casual at Juan Fernandez and Mocha Islands). — Barrett-Hamilton, Rep. Southern Cross Coll., 1902, 17-23, monographic.— Wilson, zbid., 69-71, distribution and habits. Pl ecilophoca| weddelli Flower & Lydekker, Mam. Liv. and Ext., 1891, 605. Leptonyx leopardinus Wagner, Schreber’s Saug. Suppl., VII, 1846, 38. Stenorhynchus leptonyx Moseley, Notes by a Naturalist, etc., 1879 (in error, afud Barrett-Hamilton). Kerguelen Island. Leopardine Seal, Jameson, in Weddell’s Voy. towards the South Pole, fo22, 23). 1 34. Phoca leopardina Hamilton, Amphib. Carn. in reae s Nat. Library, VI, 1839, 183, and on pl. xii and in table of contents. Attributed to Jameson and = Leopardine Seal of Jameson, as above. This species is unrepresented in the material at present available for examination from Patagonia, but Hatcher speaks of it as common off the coast at Corriken Aike. The earliest record of its occurrence in Pata- gonia is Gray’s reference in 1843 to the specimens obtained by Capt. Fitzroy at the mouth of the Santa Cruz River, on the east coast of Pata- gonia in his “List of the Specimens of Mammalia in the British Museum” (1843, p. 102), and in the ‘‘Zodlogy of the Erebus and Terror” (Mamm., 1844, p. 7, and figured in plates v and vi). Mr. Hatcher thus refers to its presence in numbers off Corriken Aike in September and October, 1896: ‘‘On quiet days, when the tides were running at their highest, the waters immediately fronting the shingle-covered beach were frequented by considerable numbers of Lef- tonyx weddeli, the common haired seal or sea leopard of this region. Occasionally these animals would approach quite near the beach, just beneath where we were engaged with our fossils, and thrusting their heads far out of the water remain stationary for a moment, apparently intent on ascertaining the meaning of our presence.” (Narrative, p. 77.) According to Albert (/ c.), a specimen was taken at Juan Fernandes Island in 1865, and the species is seen every two or three years about Mocha Island, coast of Chili. Mr. Wilson (2. c., p. 69) states that Weddell’s Seal is a shore seal, and a ALLEN: MAMMALIA: PHOCID:. gI is not met with in the ice-pack. It ranges, however, very far south, being found, he Says, “in great numbers on the coast of South Victoria Land, and is the species most commonly met with in Ross’s Sea. At almost the farthest southern point reached by the Southern Cross Expe- dition these seals were numerous, and even in a piece of water south of the edge of the Great Barrier, which apparently communicated under ice with the sea, a number of them were found... . ‘“Weddell’s Seal was the only species found breeding in any consider- able numbers by the Southern Cross Expedition. Some dead young seals were found buried in guano at Camp Ridley on Cape Adare, but apparently no Weddell’s Seals breed there now, though in Robertson Bay, close by, a large number of them were breeding, and many young were born.” The date of the birth of the young is given as September. The species was first named by Lesson in 1826, his account being based entirely on the description (by Professor Jameson) and drawing published by Captain Weddell, the previous year, in his « Voyage towards the South Pole” (p. 22). Professor Jameson's description is as follows : “ Leopar- dine seal, the neck long and tapering; the head small; the body pale- greyish above, yellowish below, and back spotted with pale white. This species to be referred to the division Stenorhingque, of F. Cuvier; the teeth, however, do not quite agree with those of his Phoque Septonyx [sic], nor with those of Sir E. Home, in pl. xxix of the Philosophical Transactions for 1822.” Yet Lesson, believing that it had small ears which had been omitted by error in the drawing, referred it to the genus Ofaria, but afterwards (1827) to the genus Stenorhyncus. Weddell brought home an “ excellent specimen,”’ which he presented to the Edinburgh Royal Museum, and which was later described in Dr. Robert Hamilton's ‘Amphibious Car- nivora”’ (Jardine’s Naturalist’s Library, Vol. VI, 1839, pp. 183-187, pl. xii). This specimen evidently came from the South Orkneys (latitude 60° 37’ S.), where Captain Weddell says his men killed quite a number of the animals, and that he saw others off the South Shetlands. This specimen, according to Barrett-Hamilton (4 ¢.) is now in the new Edinburgh Museum of Science and Art. Gray, in 1837, gave the first intelligible description of the species, from two specimens, skins and skulls, obtained by Captain Fitzroy at the mouth of the Santa Cruz River, on the coast of Patagonia, but he gave the g2 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. locality simply as the ‘“‘Southern seas.”’ In the Zodlogy of the Evebus and Zerror he redescribed these specimens in greater detail, adding the locality of capture, and giving figures of both the animal and skull. In both these accounts he adopted the specific name appropriately given it by Lesson, and by which it has since been uniformly known, except in one or two instances of inadvertence. The only synonym, and one which has never had currency, is the Poca leopardina of Hamilton, who thus rendered the ‘“ Leopardine Seal” of Jameson, contained in an inedited contribution to Weddell’s ‘“‘ Voyage,” and wrongly attributed the name to Jameson. Genus LOBODON Gray. Lobodon Gray, Zodl. Voy. Erebus and Terror, Mamm., 1844, 5. Type and only species, Phoca carcinophaga Jacquinot & Pucheran. LOBODON CARCINOPHAGA (Jacq. & Puch.). Phoca carcinophaga Jacquinot & Pucheran, Voy. au Pole Sud, Atlas, Mamm., 1842 (circa), pl. x, animal, pl. xa, skull. No description. South polar seas, ‘entre les isles Sandwich et les isles Powels.”’ Lobodon carcinophaga Gray, Zoé\. Voy. Erebus and Terror, Mamm., 1844, 5, pl. i (animal), pl. ii (skull) ; Cat. Seals Brit. Mus., 1850, 10; and of Gray’s subsequent works and papers. — Jacquinot & Pucheran, Voy. au Pole Sud, Zool., III, 1853, 27-30.—Allen, N. Amer. Pinnipeds, 1880, 466.—Cook, First Antarctic Night, 1901, 256, 281, cuts from photographs. — Barrett-Hamilton, Rep. Southern Cross Coll., 1902, 35-45, monographic. — Wilson, zbzd@., 74-76, habits and distribution. — Berg, Com. Mus. Buenos Aires, I, No. 1, Aug., 1898, 15. Acci- dental in Rio de la Plata. Stenorhynchus carcinophagus Flower, Cat. Osteol. Vertebr. Anim. Mus. College Surgeons, III, 1884, 213. Ogmorhinus carcinophagus Turner, Zoél. Challenger Exped., XXVI, pt. Ixvill, 1888, 64. Stenorhynchus servidens Owen, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., XII., Nov., 1843, 332. This species was first made known through the publication of Jacquinot and Pucheran’s plates of mammals in the Atlas of the Zodlogy of the “Voyage au Pole Sud et dans |’Oceanie,” which appeared at various dates between 1842 and 1853. Plates 10 and 1oa@ carry the name Phoca car- ALLEN: MAMMALIA: PHOCIDA. 93 cmmophaga, the first giving a view of the animal, the other excellent fig- ures of the skull and teeth. The exact date of their publication is in doubt, but they must have appeared in 1842 or early in 1843, as they are cited by Gray in 1844, in the Zodlogy of the Evedus and Zerror, where he claims priority for Jacquinot and Pucheran’s name over Stenorhynchus servidens Owen, published in the ‘Annals and Magazine of Natural His- tory’ for November, 1843. The Crab-eating Seal is one of the most common of the seals found in the pack-ice of the Antarctic regions, outside of which, so far as known, it is rarely seen. There is no record of its appearance in the Tierra del Fuego Archipelago, nor on the shores of Patagonia, but it has found its way on two or three occasions, as recorded by Berg,’ to the Rio de la Plata, near Puerto de Ensenada and San Isidro, in latitude about 34°30 south. Its more or less frequent occurrence on the coast of Patagonia seems, therefore, more or less probable. Its casual straggling to the mouth of the La Plata is somewhat parallel to the occurrence of the Crested Seal (Cystophora cristata) in Long Island Sound and on the coast of France, and the Harbor Seal (Poca vitulina) on the coast of North Carolina, 300 to 500 miles south of their normal southern limit. Its history, so far as known, is very fully detailed by Barrett-Hamilton, who gives (4 ¢., pp. 35-45) its bibliography, synonymy, distribution, habits and external and cranial characters, based on the examination of a large number of specimens obtained by the Southern Cross expedition, the Belgian Antarctic expedition, and Ross’s Antarctic expedition of 1839-43. This is supplemented by Wilson’s further notes (2 c., pp. 74- 76) on its habits and distribution. ‘Mr. Berg’s account is so short and of so much interest that it is here transcribed in full : “Lobodon carcinophagus (H. J.) Gr. en el Rio de la Plata. — Esta foca, que habita la region antartica, aparece en aislados casos también en regiones mas septentrionales. Asi, por ejemplo, menciona el Dr. Burmeister en su “Atlas de la description physique de la République Argentine. II. Die Seehunde der Argentinischen Kiisten”’ (1883), haber visto el craneo de uno de estos pini- pedios que habia llegado vivo al Rio Santo Cruz (yg 50°), sobre un témpano de hielo. “Mas digno aun de mencion es el hecho de haberse encontrado un ejemplar de esta especie en el Rio de La Plata, cerca del Puerto de Ensenada, que se conserva en el Museo de La Plata, y otro en la proximidad de San Isidro, al norte de Buenos Aires (¢ 34°28), en el mes de Junio del afio corrinete, que se encuentra actualmente en nuestro Museo. “Este ultimo ejemplar, un macho mide 2 metros y 65 centimetros, y es de color blanco im- puro, presentando algunas manchas irregulares amarillentas y poco definidas, que no fueron notadas en el animal antes del embalsamamiento.’’—C. Berg, in Comunicaciones del Museo nacional de Buenos Aires, Tomo I, No. 1, 24 de Augusto de 1898, p. 15. 94 J PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Genus MIROUNGA Gray. Macrorhine F. Cuvier, Mém. du Mus., XI, 1824, 200, pl. xiii, fig. 2, a, e, J. Type, Phoca proboscidea Péron = Phoca leonina Linn. Machvrorhinus F. Cuvier, Dict. des Sci. Nat., XXXIX, 1826, 552; LIX, 1829, 464 = Macrorhine, F. Cuvier, 1824. Preoccupied by Macro- rhinus Latreille, 1825, for a genus of Coleoptera. Macrorhyna Gray, Griffith’s An. King., I, 1827, 180 (err. typ. for AZacro- rhinus, apud Gray, Cat. Seals, 1850, 34). Mirounga Gray, Griffith's An. King., V, 1827, 179 (in part). Type, by elimination, Phoca proboscidea Péron. Morunga Gray, Zo6l. Voy. Erebus and Terror, Mamm., 1844, 4; List Osteol. Spec. Br. Mus., 1847, 33. An emendation of A@rounga and restricted to Phoca proboscidea Péron. Rhinophora Wagler, Nat. Syst. Amphib., 1830, 27. Type, Phoca pro- boscidea Péron. Cystophora Nilsson, Vet. Akad. Hand., 1837, —; Arch. f. Naturg., 1841, i, 323 (in part; not of Nilsson, 1820, when Cys/ofhora included only Phoca cristata Erxl).” Also of ‘Peters, in) pant. Physorhinus Gloger, Hand- u. Hilfsbuch der Naturg., 1841, 163. Type, Phoca proboscidea Péron. The Sea Elephant was removed from the genus Poca in 1824 by F. Cuvier as the type of a special genus to which he applied the French term Macrorhine, which he first used in its proper techinal form, Macrorhinus, in 1826 for the same group. In the meantime (1825) Latreille gave the same name to a genus of coleopterous insects. According to present usage the name Macrorhine is untenable, and its technical equivalent is preoccupied by one year by Latreille’s Macrorhinus. In 1827 Gray proposed the genus A/vounga, to include the Sea Elephant and Hooded Seal, which latter had already been made the type of the genus Cysfophora by Nilsson in 1820. The type of Mevounga would thus become, by restriction, the Sea Elephant, to which Gray himself, in 1847, restricted the name, at the same time emending it to Worunga. In 1830 Wagler proposed the genus Réznophoca, with Phoca proboscidea Péron as the type and only species. Gloger in 1841 again renamed the genus Physorhinus. From the foregoing it is evident that the proper name of the Sea Ele- phant group is Afvounga Gray, 1827. ALLEN: MAMMALIA: PHOCID&. 95 MIROUNGA LEONINA (Linnzus). Sea-lyon Anson, Voy. round the World, 1748, 122, pl. entitled ‘A Sea- Lion and Lioness, "’ Island of Juan Fernandez. Skull of Seal brought by Lord Anson from Southern Seas, Home, Comp. Anat., IV, 1823, pl. xviii. See also Nilsson, Arch. f. Naturg., 1841, i, 324 Blower, P. Z. S., 1881, t465-Cat Osteol..Coll. Mus. Roy. Coll. Surgeons, II, Mamm., 1884. Phoca leonina Linn., Syst. Nat., 1758, 37. Based exclusively on the ‘“‘Sea-lyon”’ of Anson. Loup marin Pernetty, Voy. aux Iles Malouines, II, 1769, 447, 561, pl. ix*. Figure copied from Anson, slightly altered. Phoca leonina Schreber, Saug., III, 1776, 297, pl. Ixxxiiia. Based on the above. Plate after Anson.—Shaw, Gen. Zodl., I, 1800, 268, pl. Ixxiii, after Anson. . Macrorhinus leontnus Allen, N. Am. Pinnipeds, 1880, 466 (synonomy and distribution); Fur Seal Arbitra., Case of United States, 1892, 388, economic history. — Flower, P. Z. S., 1881, 145-162 (Falkland Islands, skull and dentition, efc.); Cat. Osteol, Coll. Rey: Coll: Surgeons, IT, 1884, 215.— Turner, Zodél. Challenger Exp., pt. Ixviii, 1888, 3-19, pls. i-iv. Kerguelen and Heard Islands; external char- acters and osteology. — Albert, Act. Soc. scient. du Chili, XI, Dec., 1901, 217—220.. Synonymy, description, history, habits, products, etc. Phoca elephantina Molina, Sag. Stor. Nat. Chili, 1782, 260. New name intentionally given for Phoca leonina Linn. Morunga elephantina Gray, Zod). Erebus and Terror, Mamm., 1844, 4, 8, pl. ix, animal, female, pl. x, skull, female; Cat. Seals and Whales, 1866, 38, fig. 13, skull. Also of Gray’s various later works. ? Phoca porcina Molina, Sag. Stor. Nat. Chili, 1782, 279 (young). Phoca proboscidea Péron, Voy. aux Terres. Austr., II, 1816, 34 (32-66), pl. xxiii, animal. — Desmarest, Nouv. Dict. d’ Hist. Nat., XXV, Lolz, 550, pl. G44, fig. 2, animal; Mamm., I, 1820, 238. Mirounga proboscidea Gray, Griffith's An. King., V, 1827, 180. Morunga proboscidea Sclater, P. Z. S., 1868, 227. Falkland Islands (nearly extinct). Cystophora proboscidea Nilsson, Vet. Akad. Hand., 1837, 3 Archipf. Naturg., 1841, i, 323. With important critical and historical comment. 96 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Phoca vesima Péron, Voy. aux Terres Austr., II, 1816, 65. Iles Saint Paul et Amsterdam. Phoca coxtt Desmarest, Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat., XXV, 1817, 559. Phoca vesima Péron, 1816. Phoca ansonina et P. ansoni Blainville, Journ. de Phys., XCI, 1820, 299, 300. A composite of Phoca leonina Linn. and Ofaria jubata auct. Phoca ansonii Desmarest, Mamm., I, 1820, 239. From Blainville. (CH Nilsson, Arch. f. Naturg., 1841, 1, 325.) Mivounga patagonica Gray, Griffith's An. King., V, 1827, 180. 7. ele- phantina Gray, afud Gray in later works. Phoca dubia Fischer, Syn. Mamm., 1829, 235. Iles Malouines: based on a young specimen doubtfully referred by F. Cuvier (Dict. des Sci. Nat., XXXIX, 1826, 552) to his Macrorhinus proboscideus. Cystophora falklandica Peters, Monatsb. Akad. Berlin, 1875, 394, foot- note. Falkland Islands; Loup marin of Pernetty. Cystophora kerguelensis Peters, Monatsb. Akad. Berlin, 1875, 394, foot- note. Kerguelen Land. Lord Anson's Sea-lion, Forster, Voyage round the World, I], 1777, 527- 528. South Georgia; description of the animal; referred to in a footnote, p. 528, as the Poca l/eontna Linn. Sea Elephant, Weddell, Voy. towards the South Pole, 1825, 134-137. South Shetlands; habits, and destruction for oil. So far as the evidence has been presented, there seems to be no good reason for recognizing more than a single species of Sea Elephant in the southern seas, with which the California Sea Elephant is so closely related as to have been considered by some authors as doubtfully distinct from the southern species. Three names have been, at one time or another, more or less current for the species, as shown by the above citations, namely, leonina ( Phoca leonina Linn., 1758), elephantina (Phoca elephantina Molina, 1782), and proboscidea (Phoca proboscidea Péron, 1816). The type locality of Phoca leonina is Juan Fernandez Island, and of Phoca elephantina the coast of Chili, including the Juan Fernandez Islands, the name having been proposed as a substitute for Pioca /eonina. Péron gave the name Phoca proboscidea to the Sea Elephant of the southern seas at large. Phoca vesima of the same author has special reference to the Sea Elephant “ des St.-Pierre et St.-Paul d’ Amsterdam (Phoca- Resima, N.) dont MaCart- ney, Cox et Mortimer nous ont successivement donnée Il’intéressante his- ALLEN: MAMMALIA: PHOCIDA. 97 toire,” afterwards renamed Phoca coxit by Desmarest. In 1875 Peters proposed to call the Falkland Islands animal, the Loup marin of Pernetty, Cystophora falklandica, and the Kerguelen animal Cystophora kerguelensis. In this connection Peters recognized five species of Sea Elephant, as fol- lows: 1, Cystophora leonina (Linn.); 2, C. falklandica, sp. nov., Sea Lion of Pernetty ; 3, C. proboscidea (Péron); 4, C. angustirostris (Gill), California Sea Elephant ; 5, C. kevguelensis, sp.nov., The two new names are given in a footnote, without indication of any distinctive characters, the record merely expressing the author’s opinion respecting probable species of Sea Elephants. Subsequent writers have almost unanimously referred all of the Sea Elephants of the southern hemisphere to a single species, /eonzva Linn. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. — ‘‘Sea-elephants were formerly found in great abundance at nearly all of the Oceanic Islands south of the thirtieth parallel of south latitude. Kerguelen Land and Heard Island were espec- ially favorite resorts for them: They were also abundant at the Falkland Islands, Staten Land, South Georgia, throughout the Tierra del Fuego Archipelago, on the coasts of Patagonia, and as far north on the Pacific coast of South America as Mas-a-Fuero and Juan Fernandez. They also occurred in large numbers at the Tristan d’Acunha group, the Crozets, the Prince Edward Islands, St. Paul and Amsterdam Islands, the coasts and islands of southern Australia and New Zealand, and the numerous islands to the southward and eastward of New Zealand. At most of these points, however, they became long since practically exterminated, though still oc- curring at Kerguelen Land, Heard Island, and at a few other points in suf- ficient numbers to render sea-elephant hunting attractive to the few sealers and whalers who still frequent these waters.? ‘“ HISTORY OF SEA-ELEPHANT HunrTING. — Sea-elephant hunting began early in the present century, and for years, either exclusively or in con- junction with whaling, proved a lucrative employment, largely monopolized by Americans. From the incomplete statistics at hand, sea-elephant hunt- "« The evidence upon which Dr. Peters has based four supposed species of southern Elephant Seal, viz., /eonina, falklandica, proboscidea, and kerguelensis, is still more shadowy ; but these were only put forth by him as suggestions of possibilities, not as ascertained facts.’-—Flower, P. Z. S., 1881, p. 162. *To the above it may be added that Sea Elephants are not found in the high Antarctic latitudes, appearing not to reach the pack-ice and the shores of the Antarctic lands, the favorite haunts of the other southern Phocids. 93 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. ing appears to have been begun in 1803 on the coast of Patagonia, and was prosecuted there more or less regularly till 1819, during which period a total of about 15,000 barrels of sea-elephant oil appears to have been taken from Patagonia alone. In 1817 about 2,500 barrels were taken at the Falkland Islands, and also about 2,500 barrels in 1837. In 1820—'22 about 4,000 barrels were taken at the South Shetland Islands, and again about 2,000 barrels at the same islands in 1831. About 2,000 barrels are accredited to the South Georgian Islands in 1829. In 1838 5,000 barrels were obtained at Kerguelen Land; in 1838 and 1839 about 5,000 barrels were taken at the Crozet Islands. During the decade 1840-50 nearly half the take of sea-elephant oil (about 16,000 barrels), came from Ker- guelen Land, the total take, so far as statistics are available, being about 37,000 barrels. About this time the sea-elephant hunters began to visit Heard Island, and of the 84,000 barrels taken during the decade of 1850- ‘60, four-fifths were obtained at Kerguelen Land and Heard Island (the latter first discovered in 1853). During the following decade (1860-70) about 36,000 barrels were reported as taken, nearly all of which came from the two last-named islands. The same is true of the decade from 1870 to 1880, but the amount of oil declined for this period to about 30,000 barrels, the decline being especially marked toward the close of the decade. It has been stated that during fifty years, beginning with the year 1837, not less than 175,000 barrels of sea-elephant oil were obtained from Ker- guelen Land and Heard Island. As in later years, young of all ages as well as adults were taken, regardless, also, of season and condition, the number of sea-elephants annually destroyed at these seal islands must have been in the neighborhood 40,000 individuals, or a total of probably Over 2,000,000. ‘‘At these islands certain extensive beaches are described as being inac- cessible from the water on account of the boisterous seas which constantly prevail, while precipitous cliffs render it impossible to transport the oil from these beaches to the vessels. Here great numbers of sea-elephants annually haul up in security to breed, thus preserving the species from extermination, which doubtless otherwise would long since have over- taken them. ‘More or less sea-elephant oil has been taken annually since 1880, but the amount is small in comparison with the earlier years, owing to the increasing scarcity of the sea-elephants. ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDA. 99 “The oil is chiefly used for softening wool, and for other purposes in the manufacture of cloth, for which it is especially adapted. ‘The above relates only to the operations of Americans, and even for these the published statistics are far from complete (given principally by A. Howard Clark in Goode’s ‘Fishery Industries of the United States’). When we add to this the enormous number of sea-elephants that have fallen a prey to sealers of other nationalities, it is nota matter for surprise that these animals have long since been practically extinct, commercially speaking, except at the few points where the physical surroundings afford them protection from their inhuman enemies.” Family O7ARIIDAEZ. The Eared Seals are separable into two supergeneric groups, distin- guishable externally by differences in the character of the pelage, in the length of the ears, in coloration, and in size. These groups, while rather sharply defined, especially as regards the nature of the pelage, are hardly entitled to rank as subfamilies. In the first of these the pelage is coarse and harsh, and without underfur ; the ears are rather short, and the gene- ral coloration is yellowish brown in adults, darker and more reddish brown in the young, especially on the limbs, and the species all attain large size. This group includes the genera Eumetopias, Otaria, Zalophus and Phocarc- tos, each, except Zalophus, being monotypic. They are here mentioned in the order of size, the representatives of the first attaining the largest dimensions. The second group includes the Fur Seals of commerce, in which the pelage consists of rather long overhair, beneath which is an abundant coat of very fine, soft, thick underfur, which gives to the peltries their high commercial value. The coloration in adults is grayish, the longer hairs being dark brown tipped with gray; in old individuals the coloration be- comes decidedly gray, while the young in early life are black. The underfur is generally rich brown, lighter towards the base. This group includes the two genera CaM/otarta ( = Callorhinus Gray) and Arctocephalus, the former embracing the Fur Seals of the North Pacific and the latter those of the southern seas; a species was also found formerly on the coast and islands of southern and Lower California, but it is now nearly extinct. ‘Allen, in Proceedings of the Tribunal of the Fur Seal Arbitration, etc., Appendix to the United States Case, Vol. I, 1892, pp. 389, 390. 100 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. The following synopsis gives in brief the diagnostic characters and geo- graphical distribution of the several genera. SYNOPSIS OF THE GENERA. A, Pelage harsh, without underfur ; size large ; color yellowish brown....... TRICHOPHOCACA. a. Molars $=’; palate deeply concave. 6. Palatine bones prolonged nearly to the pterygoid hamuli, truncate posteriorly. Coasts and) islands ofisouthern South: Americas sions oc aicwets a oot ane oeeree ones Otaria, 6. Palatine bones ending considerably in front of the pterygoid hamuli, narrowed and emarginate postenorny. sAukland Islands) a.icctrereaitare sister creeien cle Phocarctos. 10 10° c. Palatine bones ending very far in front of the pterygoid hamuli, posterior border hol- lowed or emarginate ; interorbital region moderately constricted; sagittal crest moderate. Molars }?= ‘°, a long diastema between m4 and m&. North Pacific. Eumetopias. c.’ Palatines much as in Eumetopias ; interorbital region greatly constricted ; sagittal 4» no diastema between m4 and m§&, a.’ Molars 3 = 5-5 . 5-5 crest enormously developed; molars = = California and Japan, and-Australian Seas... .3 5 0.0.0 woes eros Heaen Zalophus. B. Pelage soft, with abundant underfur ; size much smaller ; color gray, black in young. OULIPHOCACA. a. Facial portion of skull broad, short, and high; brain-case short and broad; molar teeth Semel PIN OMEN RABI Gr yh s lati nisi wilco Diacn Bubp lees slop Ris WM Ace keen aNeTaeEe Callotaria. a.’ Facial portion of skull slender, narrow, elongated, and sloping ; molars large. Southern SEAS AMALIA is ovtanotoye rs sie ahepie casero) crater Clem ichans icncvelcTave enema rater eratetete Arctocephalus. From the foregoing it will be seen that the Eared Seals are geograph- ically separated into two groups, the one northern, the other southern. The former includes the genera Eumefopias, Zalophus, and Callotaria ; the latter Ofavia, Phocarctos, and Arctocephalus. The last-named genus, however, furnishes a partial exception to this statement, for it not only ranges northward on the west coast of South America to the Galapagos Archipelago, situated on the equator, but has also a representative — or had, it being now practically extinct—as far north as the coast of Lower California, namely, the 4rctocephalus townsendi, described by Merriam in 1897 from Guadalupe Island. As Calofaria formerly ranged southward in its winter migrations to the coast of California, it must have nearly or quite met the range of Arcfocephalus. Fur Seals were actively hunted during the first third of the nineteenth century all along the Pacific coast of North America as far south as Lower California and the islands off the west coast of Mexico, in north latitude 18° to 20°. As, however, no specimens were secured for scientific examination, and the animals have ~ > ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDA:. IOI since become practically extinct, it is now impossible to determine the former southward limit of CaWofaria, or the former northward limit of Arctocephalus. While the Phocids, or Earless Seals, are circumpolar in distribution, in both hemispheres, the Eared Seals are confined, in the northern hemisphere, to the shores and islands of the Pacific Ocean, but are circumpolar in the southern hemisphere. It is noteworthy, however, that in neither hemi- sphere do they reach nearly so high latitudes, and never range into the pack-ice, as do most of the species of the Phocidz, in both the Arctic and Antarctic regions. Genus OTARIA Péron. Ofarie Peron, Ann. du Mus. d’Hist. Nat., XV, 1810, 300. The only spe- cies mentioned is Steller’s Sea Lion, but he gives a reference to his “Voyage aux Terres Australes,” correctly citing volume and page ast Ty p37. Ofaria Peron, Voy. aux Terr. Austr., II, 1816, 37, footnote and fasszm, Pp. 40-52, in part. Type, by elimination, Phoca byronta Blain- ville = Ofaria leonina Péron, 1816, et auct.= Phoca leonina Molina, 1782, preoccupied by Phoca /eonina Linn., 1758. Ofoes G. Fischer, Mém. Soc. Imp. des Sci. Nat. de Moscou, V, 1817, 445. =Ofaria Péron, 1816. Ofaria Gray, Zoél. Erebus and Terror, Mamm., 1844, 5, in part. Ofaria Gill, ex Péron, Proc. Essex Inst., V, 1866, ve Ofaria Peters, Monatsb., k. p. Akad. Wissen. Berlin, 1877, 505. ‘‘ Ofaria Perones: S\ Platyrhyncus F. Cuvier, Dict. des Sci. Nat., XXXKIX, 1826, 555=Le Platyrhinque, F. Cuvier, Mém. du Mus., XI, 1824, pl. xv, fig. 2 (skull), in part. Type, as determined by the figured skull, Osaria leontna auct. GENERIC CHARACTERS. — Palatine bones extending nearly to the ptery- goid processes, deeply concave, truncate posteriorly. Molars in a con- tinuous series, ;=;;, Ears short. Pelage without underfur. GENERAL History.—The genus Ofaria contains but a single well- established species, the O. dyronta (=O. leonina or O. jubata of most authors) of southern South America. Various other species have been 102 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. proposed, but they rest thus far on very unsatisfactory evidence, as will be noted later. All the Seals were placed by all authors in the Linnaan genus Phoca till Péron, in 1810,' proposed to consider the Eared Seals as a new genus, “sous le nom d’Ofavve.” In 1816 he introduced, informally, the generic name O/aria for these animals, which he employed incidentally and con- sistently for them throughout his chapter on the Sea Elephant in the second volume of the ‘‘ History” of Freycinet’s ‘‘ Voyage aux Terres Australes.’’? He mentioned here, in footnotes and in the text, three species of Eared Seals, and subsequently two others in the same volume, as follows: (1) Otaria ursina (pp. 39, 41, 42, 49, 52) = Phoca ursina Linn., based on the Sea Bear of Steller; (2) Ofavia leonina (pp. 40, 65, etc.) =Sea Lion of Forster; (3) Otaria jubata (p. 40, footnote) = Leo marinus of Steller; (4) Otaria cinerea (p. 77), Iles, Decrés,—not identifiable; (5) Ofarza albicollis (p. 118), Isle Eugéne. The first three of these names (O. wrszna, O. leonina and O. jubata) are perfectly identifiable with previously de- scribed and now well-known species. The other two (O. cénerea and O. albicollis) were given to supposed new species, but so inadequately de- scribed as not to be satisfactorily identifiable.* Up to this time all of the Sea Lions had been regarded as forming a single species, named Phoca jubata by Schreber in 1776, and all the Sea Bears, or Fur Seals, as referable to the Poca ursina of Linnzeus (1758). Péron thus for the first time not only separated the Otaries from the Pho- cids, but he also distinctly separated the Northern Sea Lion from the Southern Sea Lion, retaining for the former (very properly, as will be ‘Ann. du Mus. d’Hist. Nat., Vol. XV, 1810, p. 300, footnote. He here cites his use of the name “ Otarie” (probably written by him Ofaria) in “ Voyage aux Terres Australes, t. ii, p. 37,” which work was not issued until long after the sheets were printed, owing to delay with the plates. Osaria Péron is generally cited from the ‘‘ Voyage,” 1816, which appears to be its proper date. ? Voyage de découvertes aux Terres Australes, Historique, Tome Second, 1816 . . . Chap- itre XXIII, “ Histoire de l’Elephant marin, ou Phoque a trompe [Phoca proboscidea, N]: Péches des Anglois aux Terres Australes,’’ pp. 32-66, pl. xxiil. ’Mr. G. W. Clark, who some years ago made them the subject of special investigation (see his valuable paper “ On the Eared Seals of the Islands of St. Paul and Amsterdam, with Description of the Fur Seal of New Zealand, and an attempt to distinguish and rearrange the New Zealand Otariide,” in P. Z. S., 1875, pp. 650-677, pll. Ixx-Ixxii, and 8 text cuts), considers O. cinerea as closely related to Arctocephalus forsteri, but possibly entitled to recognition as a species, with- out, it seems to me, very good grounds. He considers QO. adbicollis as identical with Gray’s Arctocephalus lobatus, which is perhaps probable, though not satisfactorily provable. ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIID. 103 shown later) the specific name suda/a, and giving a new name to the latter, which unfortunately proves to be untenable.' In 1817 G. Fischer, evidently ignorant that Péron had established the generic name Ofavia for the Eared Seals, proposed for them the name Ovoes,* basing his name entirely on G. Cuvier’s ‘‘Les Phoques 4 oreilles extérieures,” in the ‘“Régne Animal”’ (I, 1817, p. 166), his own account of which is an unabridged paraphrase of Cuvier’s, even to Cuvier’s error in respect to the incisors. He cites as referable to it “ Phoca jubata, ursina, Lin. Gmel.,” in other words, the Sea Lions (Poca jubata auct.) and the Sea Bears (Phoca ursina auct.) as they were known to Cuvier and naturalists generally at the time, who believed there were only one spe- cies of each, both common to the Arctic and Antarctic regions. No one but Péron appears to have thought otherwise for the next ten years; even as late as 1823, G. Cuvier spoke? derisively of Péron’s assumption that none of the seals of the ‘‘hemisphére antarctique”’ were ‘‘de méme espéce que ceux du nord.” It consequently happens that the genus Oéves Fischer, 1817, is an exact synonym of Ofaria Péron, 1816. It is therefore inadmissable to assume, as has been recently done,‘ that the name Ovves is available for the northern Fur Seals, on the ground that what Fischer did ‘‘was simply to apply a generic name to Cuvier’s group [= ‘‘Otaries Péron’’] whose name Cuvier avowedly took, which. . . . was based chiefly on the northern and not the southern fur seal.’’ While the first part of this statement is per- fectly correct, the latter is not, Cuvier’s Phoca ursiuva including a southern Fur Seal (“Phoca pusilla”) and a southern Sea Lion (‘le phoque jaune de Shaw, etc.,””), as well as a citation of “Buff, Supp. VII [lege VI], pl. xlvii,” which plate Buffon states is after a design from nature by Forster, which, as all investigators of the group know, relates to the Fur Seal of 1 The following quotations from Péron show the manner in which the two names Otaria leonina and Otaria jubata were introduced. Péron (/. c., p. 40, in the text) says: “. . . (Borster, 2° Voy. de Cook, tom VIII, pag—56). L’auteur parle ici de l’Otaria Leonina, N.*” ; and adds in a footnote to the same page : , “@ Quelque singulier que puisse étre le phénoméne dont il s’agit, il n’est pas cependant particulier aux grands Phocacés des régions Australes, STELLER a observé quelque chose d’analogue sur le Lion marin du Nord [Otaria jubata, N.]”” —and then follows a quotation from Steller. 2Mem. Soc. Imp. des Nat. de Moscou, V, 1817, p. 445. 3 Ossem. foss., V, 1823, p. 218. ‘ Cf. Palmer, Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, XIV, pp. 133, 134, Aug. 9, 190I. 104 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. New Zealand, Forster's drawing having been made at Dusky Bay, on the southeastern coast of South Island, New Zealand, March 31, 1773.1 In 1824 F. Cuvier’ separated the Otaries (which he still looked upon as consisting of only two species) into two groups, under vernacular French names, as follows: (1) ‘‘Arctocéphale,” and (2) ‘‘ Platyrhinque.” He says ‘‘nous prenons le type de ce genre Arctocephale dans l’Ours marin, Phoca ursina.’’ Of the second he says: ‘Le lion marin (Poca leonina) paroit étre le type de ce dernier genre, auquel nous donnerons la dénomination de Platyrhinque.” Two years later he introduced these terms in proper Latin form, as, re- spectively, 4rctocephalus and Platyrhyncus*® and says, “ quoique l'un et l'autre de ces genre ne se composent encore manifestement que d’une seule espéce.”’ One he calls ‘“4rctocephalus ursinus; Ursus marinus, Steller, Novi comment. petrop., 11, p. 331’’; vaguely referring also to Pernetty and Forster. The other he calls “ Platyrhyncus leoninus,; Lion marin, Steller, Nov. act. petrop., 2; Forster, 2 Voyages de Cook, t. 4; Pernetti, Voyage aux iles Malouines, t. 2, pl. 10,’’ etc. No specimens are definitely mentioned in either of Cuvier’s articles, but a skull of each genus is figured in his first paper. These illustrations are based not on Steller’s animals mentioned in the text, but, in the case of Platyriyncus, on the Southern Sea Lion, and in the case of 4rcfocephalus on a fur seal from the Cape of Good Hope. Cuvier’s plate xv (Z. c.) therefore determines the type for both groups, which in the case of 4rctocephalus is the Cape of Good Hope species, 4rctocephalus antarcticus (Thunberg), and in the case of Platyrhyncus, the sea lion of Patagonia and the Falkland Islands, named Otaria leonina by Peron. This would restrict Ofaria to Steller’s Sea Lion were it not, fortunately for the present current nomenclature of the group, that the name Platyrhynchus is doubly preoccupied — for a genus of birds by Desmarest in 1805, and by Thunberg in 1815 for a genus of Coleoptera. It hence fortunately happens that the first valid restriction of Ofaria, after the Fur Seals (4rcfocephalus) were removed, was made in 1866, when Gill established Ezmefopias for the sea lion of Steller, and Zalophus for ' Gf. Forster's Descript. Anim., p. 64. Compare also Forster’s “‘ Voyage Round the World,” I, 1777, p. 151, and Buffon, Hist. Nat., Suppl., VI, 1782, pp. 330, ef seq. *Mém. du Mus. d’Hist. Nat. XI, 1824, pp. 205-209, pl. xv. *Dict. des Sci. Nat., Vol. XXXIX, 1826, pp. 553-555. ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDA. 105 the California Sea Lion, and Peters proposed Phocarctos for the Aukland Islands Sea Lion. Of¢avza is thus, by the elimination of all the other types originally included under it, restricted tothe Southern Sea Lion, or the Sea Lion of Forster. OTARIA BYRONIA (Blainville). (Plate XXI, Skeleton.) Lion marin, Pernetty, Voy. aux Iles Malouines, 1769, 447, pl. viti, fig. 1 (animal). Falkland Islands. Phoca jubata Schreber, Saug., II], 1776, 300. In part; mainly based on Steller’s Leo marinus, but includes ‘Zion marin Pernetty.” Also, in part, of Erxleben, Zimmermann, Gmelin, Kerr, Shaw, Gia FE. Cuvier, Fischer, and systematists generally until about 1830, and of some later authors. Sea-lion, Forster, Voy. Round the World, II, 1777, 512-515. Sea-Lion of Forster, Hamilton, Amphibious Carnivora (Jardine’s Nat. Library, VI), 1839, 237, pl. xviii, animal, after Forster. Le Lion-marin, Buffon, Hist. Nat. Suppl., VI, 1782, 358-380 (in part), pl. Ixviii, ‘‘dessine d’aprés nature par M. Forster.” Phoca jubata Biainville, Journ. de Phys., CXI, 1820, 294; Ostéog., Les Phoques, 1840, pll. iii (skeleton), vi (skull), and ix (dentition). — Forster, Descrip. Anim., 1844, 317. Staten Land, New Year’s Island and Patagonia. Otavia jubata Desmarest, Mamm., I, 1820, 248 (in part).— Nilsson, K. Vet. Handl. Stockholm, 1837,—; Arch. f. Naturg., 1841, 1, 329 (in part). — Gray, List Mamm. Brit. Mus., 1843, 103; Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (3), XVIII, 1866, 230; Suppl. Cat. Seals and Whales, 1871, 13; Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), IX, 1872, 483; ‘‘ Handlist Seals, Morses, Sea-Lions and Sea-Bears, 1874.’’— Tschudi, Fauna Peruana, 1844-46, 135.— Peters, Monatsb. Akad. Wissen. zu Berlin, 1866, 263, 665, 670; zbzd., 1877, 505.— Abbott, P. Z. S., 1868, 190, Falkland Islands. —Sclater, P. Z. S., 1868, 190, 527-529 (fasszm), Falkland Islands. —Murie, P. Z. S., 1869, 101-106, skull, male and female, Falkland Islands; Trans. Zod]. Soc. London, VII, pt. xvi, 1872, 501-582, pll. Ixvii-Ixxii; VIII, pt. xvi, 1874, 527-596, pll. Ixxv— Ixxxii, anatomy, Falkland Islands. — Allen, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zodl., II, 1870, 44 (in part); Hist. N. Amer. Pinnipeds, 1880, 208. — Cun- ningham, Nat. Hist. Strait Magellan, 1871, 126.— Hensel, Phys. 106 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Abhandl. Akad. Wissen. zu Berlin, 1872 (1873), 91, Lobos Islands, Uruguay ; also, formerly, Lobos Islands off Sta. Catharina, Brazil.— Burmeister, Descrip. phys. Rép. Argent., III, 1879, 526-528, Atlas, 2” livr., pl. viii, skulls and teeth, showing variation with age and sex. Islas de los Lobos, Argentina.— Thomas, P. Z. S., 1881, 4, Magellan Strait. — Flower, Cat. Osteol. Coll. Roy. Coll. Surgeons, II, 1884, 187-190 (special mention of the Commodore Byron Sea- Lion skull, p. 189).— Turner, Zodl. Voy. Challenger, pt. Ixvili, 1887, 29, Falkland Islands. — Philippi, An. Mus. nac. Chile, I, Zool., 1892, 5, 9, pl. i, animal. — Figueira, An. Mus. nac. Montevideo, II, 1894, 203.— Albert, Act. Soc. scient. du Chili, XI, 1901, 257-271, synonymy, description, distribution, habits, etc.—Dabbene, An. Mus. Buenos Aires, I, 1902, 350, Tierra del Fuego. — Heller, Proc. California Acad. Nat. Sci. (3), Zodl., III, 1904, 243, Galapagos Archipelago. Phoca leonina Molina, Sag. Stor. Nat. Chili, 1782, — (not of Linnzeus, 1758). Coast of Chili. Otarvta leonina Péron, Voy. aux Terr. Austr., II, 1816, 40, 65.— Desmarest, Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat., XXV, 1817, 590 (in part). —Gray, Zodl. Voy. Erebus and Terror, Mamm., 1841, 5, pl. xvii, fig. 1, 2, skull, juv.; Cat. Seals in Brit. Mus., 1850, 47; Cat. Seals and Whales, 1866, 59.—Peters, Monatsb. Akad. Berlin, 1866, 264, 665, 670 (referred to as a doubtful species). ? Fared Seal, Pennant, Hist. Quad., II, 1793, 278, young. ‘‘Streights of Magellan.”’ ? Phoca flavescens Shaw, Gen. Zodl., I, ii, 1800, 260, young. Based on Pennant, as above. ? Otaria flavescens Desmarest, Nouv. Dict. d’ Hist. Nat., XXV, 1817, 601 ; Mamm., I, 1820, 252. Based on Shaw and Pennant, as above. — Lesson, Man. de Mamm., 1827, 207; Dict. class. d’Hist. Nat., XIII, 1828, 425. Based on the foregoing. Sea lon from the tsland of Tinian by Commodore Byron, Biainville, Journ. de, Phys., XCl, Oct. 1820, 287; 410; pl. “Wee, 4920,” fig... P{hoca| byronta? Blainville, zdzd., 300. Same as above. Phoca byrontt Desmarest (ex Blainville MS.), Mamm., I, 1820, 240. ‘Sea lion from the Island of Tinian, by Commodore Byron,” in Hunterian Museum, afterwards in Mus. Coll. Surgeons, London. Skull only= Phoca byronia Blainville, Oct., 1820. EA Pe - = ee ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDA. 107 Macrorhinus byront Lesson, Man. de Mamm., 1827, 202. Ofaria byronia Peters, Monatsb. k. Akad. Wissen. Berlin, 1866, 269, 666. Phoca byronia Blainville. Given as doubtfully distinct from O. jubata auct. “Otaria byronia (Blainville),”’ Burmeister, Zeitsch. fiir gesammte Natur- wiss. Halle, XXXI, 1868, p. 298, in text; referred to O. jubata auct. Ontaria |sic] molossina Lesson & Garnot, Férussac’s Bull. Sci. Nat., VIII, 1826, 96 (prelim. desc.), Iles Malouines (= Falkland Islands). Otaria molossina Lesson & Garnot, Voy. Coquille, Zool., I, 1826, 140— 149, pl. ili, animal. Detailed description of a young sea-lion, from Falkland Islands. — Philippi, An. Mus. nac. Chile, I, Zool., 1892, 6, 22, pl. ix, animal, pl. x, skull, juv. Platyrhyncus molossinus Lesson, Man. de Mamm., 1827, 203. Same as above. Otaria guerin Quoy & Gaimard, Zool. Voy. Uranie, 1824, 71 (footnote). Falkland Islands. Platyrhyncus uranie Lesson, Man. de Mamm., 1827, 204. From Quoy & Gaimard, as above. Lion marin, Pernetty, Voy. aux Iles Malouines, 1769, 447, pl. viii, fig. 1. Iles Malouines. Sea Lion, Pernetty, Hist. Voy. to the Malouine (or Falkland) Islands, 2d English ed., London, 1773, 240-242, pl. xvi. Falkland Islands. Otaria pernettyt Lesson, Dict. class. d’Hist. Nat., XIII, 1828, 421. Based on the Sea Lion of Pernetty, as above. Sea Lion of Pernetty, Hamilton, Amph. Carn. (Jardine’s Nat. Libr.), 1839, 244, pl. xix, animal, from specimens in the Edinburgh Mus. Otaria chilensts Miiller, Arch. f. Naturg., 1841, i, 333, Chili. — Philippi, An Mus nae. Chile, 1° Zooel!, 1892)6, 25, pl. xi, fig. 1, animal, pl. xii, skull, juv., showing part of milk dentition. Otaria ulloe Tschudi, Fauna Peruana, Mamm., 1844-46, 136, pl. vi, ani- mal. Coast of Peru. — Peters, Monatsb. k. Akad. zu Berlin, 1866, 270 ; 2bid., 667, 2 pll., skull, % nat. size. — Burmeister, Zeitsch. fiir gesammte Naturwiss. Halle, XXXI, 1868, 298, in text ; considered as the female of Ofarta jubata auct.— Philippi, Mus. nac. Chile, I, Zool., 1892, 12, pl. vi, animal, pll. vii, viii, skull, female. Otaria hookeri Sclater, P. Z. S., 1866, 80, text fig. of animal. In error; gy, oelater, PZ. S.; 1868, 190; 108 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Otaria godeffroyt Peters, Monatsb. k. Akad. zu Berlin, 1866, 264, 670, pl. i, skull, Chincha Islands, Peru.— Burmeister, Zeits. fiir gesammte Naturwiss. Halle, XX XI, 1868, 296, 297, in text, referred to O. 7u- bata auct. Otaria minor Gray, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), XIII, April, 1874, 326. Locality unknown (cf Allen, N. Am. Pinn., 1880, p. 201). Otaria pygmea Gray, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), XIII, April, 1874, 326. Locality unknown (cf Allen, 7 c. sapr.). Otaria velutina Philippi, An. Mus. nac. Chile, I, Zool., 1892, 5, 14. Otaria fulva Philippi, An. Mus. nac. Chile, I, Zool., 1892, 5, 17, pl. ii, animal, pll. i, iv, v, skull, juv. ‘Costa de Algarroba y Provincia Bahia de Talcahuana.” Specimens described and figured are very young. Otaria rufa Philippi, An. Mus. nac. Chile, I., Zool., 1892, 6, 28, pl. xiii, fig. I, animal. Length, 990 mm. EXTERNAL CHARACTERS.'—General color of adult light yellowish brown, lighter on the head, darker and more reddish brown on the but- tocks and limbs ; muzzle and naked membranes of the feet black. Young dark chocolate brown, much darker than the adult, the coloration be- coming gradually lighter with age. Females are said to be like the males in coloration. Length of adult male from muzzle to end of tail about 6 to 7 feet, and from the muzzle to the end of the hind flippers about 8 to g feet. Female about one third less in linear measurements. The old males are described by the early voyagers as maned like a lion, but this is in no strict sense true. The hair is longer on the neck and shoulders than elsewhere, but the maned effect is due mainly to the thick skin being thrown into heavy folds when the head is raised. SKULL.—The skull of this species has been so often figured and is ‘The material collected by the Princeton Patagonian Expeditions relating to the Pinnipedia not having been conveniently accessible during the preparation of this work I have drawn upon previously published descriptions in dealing with their external and osteological characters. Through the kindness of the authorities of the United States National Museum and the Cam- bridge Museum of Comparative Zodlogy I have had opportunity to restudy a considerable series of skulls of both the Southern Sea Lion and the Southern Sea Bears, and have utilized to some extent material from my “ Monograph of the North American Pinnipeds,’’«published in 1880. I am also indebted to the kindness of Prof. W. B. Scott for Plate X XI, illustrating the skeleton of Otaria bryonia, based on a mounted specimen from Patagonia, collected by the Princeton Pata- gonian Expeditions. re es ree er Se ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDA. 109 now so well known that a detailed description is unnecessary. It varies greatly in the two sexes, the male skull being much larger than that of the female, with an excessive development of the processes and crests, as age advances. The average dimensions of old male skulls from the Straits of Magellan are: Total length 350 mm., ranging in a series of 8 old skulls from 325 to 372; zygomatic breadth 223, ranging from 210 to 237. Four old female skulls give an average total length of 260 (252 to 277), and a zygomatic breadth of 143 (140 to 146).! Dr. James Murie? and Dr. William Turner’ have made known the anatomy of this species in great detail, their work being based on Falk- land Island specimens. The Southern Sea Lion bears a strong general similarity externally to the Northern Sea Lion, which it resembles in color and proportions, but, judging from the skulls, it is about one eighth smaller. In cranial char- acters the two animals are remarkably distinct for members of the same family, not only in dental formula but in the formation of the bony palate. But they appear to agree as closely in habits as in external appearance, both being polygamous, and resorting to particular islands or coasts at a definite season of the year to bring forth their young. GEOGRAPHICAL DIsTRIBUTION.— The Sea Lions of the coasts and islands of southern South America are commonly believed to be referable to a single species, of rather wide distribution. It formerly occurred in great abundance at the Galapagos Islands, and is still found there in small numbers‘; also along the coasts of Peru and Chili to Cape Horn, resort- ing especially to some of the islands of this part of the South American coast. It also frequented the eastern coast of Patagonia, and still ranges north to Lobos Island, off the mouth of the Rio de la Plata, and formerly north to the coast of Brazil, off Sta. Catharina’. It was formerly numer- '@. Allen, N. Am. Pinnipeds, pp. 226 (footnote), 246, 247; Murie, Trans. Zodl. Soc. Lon- don, 1869, p. 105. * Researches on the Anatomy of the Pinnipedia. Part II. Descriptive Anatomy of the Sea Lion (Ovaria jubata). By James Murie, M.D., F.L.S., F.G.S., etc. Trans. Zodl. Soc. London, Vol. VI, pt. viii, Jan., 1872, pp. 527-596, pll. Ixvii-Ixxiii; Vol. VIII, pt. ix, June, 1874, pp. 501-582, pll. Ixxv—Ixxxii. * Report on the Seals collected during the Voyage of H. M. S. Challenger in the years 187 3- 76. Zodl. Chall. Exp., pt. Ixviii, 1887, pp. 1-138, pll. i-x. Appendix to the Report on the Seals. The Myology of the Pinnipedia. By Wm. C. Strettell Miller. lbid., pp. 139-234. *Heller, Proc. California Acad. Sci. (3), Zoél., XII, 1904, 244. * Hensel, Abhandl. K. Akad. Wissen. zu Berlin, 1872 (1873), 91: IIo PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. ous at the Falkland Islands and in the Tierra del Fuego Archipelago. It does not appear to have been reported from the South Shetland and South Georgian Islands, nor from any point more remote from the South Ameri- can coast than the Juan Fernandez and Falkland Islands. In the report on the Southern Cross Collections (1902), it is not mentioned as hav- ing been met with by the naturalists of this expedition during their long cruise in Antarctic waters. Respecting their recent occurrence on the eastern coast of Patagonia Mr. Barnum Brown (MSS. notes) says: ‘Two herds of sea lions were found on the coast of Patagonia at a point about twenty miles south of the mouth of the Santa Cruz River, where they have bred and been noted since the earliest settlements along the southern coast. They occupy two distinct rookeries, although not more than half a mile apart; the herd furthest north, numbering less than 200 head, lives in tide-worn crevices and caverns, from which they slide into the sea with great noise when disturbed. The southern and largest herd has over 300 head, which lives, when ashore, on the open shingle beach under the cliffs. Others were seen off Cape Hall, but they were not in rookeries.”’ NOMENCLATURE AND TECHNICAL History.—The early voyagers to high southern latitudes met with Sea Lions, Sea Bears, and Sea Wolves at various points on or near the coast of southern South America and described them in narrations of their voyages, usually in vague terms, but sometimes with sufficient detail to render them recognizable, when the locality is considered, in the light of our present knowledge of the subject. The technical history of the present species may be said to have begun with Pernetty,t whose Lion marin, though poorly described and badly figured, observed by him at the Falkland Islands in 1764, is identifiable as this animal, although his account of it is more or less confused with that of the Sea Lion of Anson. Pernetty’s Lion marin became, in 1776, in part the basis of Schreber’s Phoca jubata (/. c.), who quotes Pernetty as authority for his statement that the male has long curly hair (“langen krausen Haare’’) on the nape and neck, like the male lion, and a length of 25 feet and a girth of 19 to 20 feet,? and for its occurrence at the Falk- "Voyage aux Iles Malouines, 1769, p. 447, pl. viii, fig. 1. *It is hard to say whether Pernetty meant this statement to apply to his Lion marin or to Lord Anson’s Sea-lion, which Pernetty insists was injudiciously applied to what he calls Loup-marin, his statements are so confused. — 2 np al ae CORINA tie . Sn ee i i o> sen ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDA. ey land Islands. Schreber also mixes Pernetty’s account of its habits with Steller's, although Steller is necessarily his main authority, Pernetty’s information is so meagre. As, however, Steller gave no figure of the sea lion, Schreber supplied this deficiency by copying Pernetty’s grotesque caricature of the Falkland Island animal. Schreber's Phoca jubata was thus composite, though based primarily on Steller. For the next fifty years, or till 1828, nearly all systematic writers fol- lowed Schreber in considering the northern and southern sea lions as specifically identical. Péron, in 1816,' was the first author who had the hardihood to assert that they were specifically distinct, and acting upon this belief he bestowed the name /eonéva upon the southern one and restricted the name jwbafa, very properly, to the northern one, calling them respectively Ofaria leonina and Ofaria jubata, without, however, pointing out their distinctive differences. This he doubtless did, or intended to do, in a paper on the Pinnipedia he left in manuscript at his death, in 1810, which was never published. Thus Péron, as the “first reviser,’’ fixed the name jwda/a, as he had a right to do, very appropriately on the Leo marinus of Steller. Unfortunately his name /eonzna for the Falkland Islands species proves untenable, although subsequently employed for it for many years by numerous authors. Its untenability in this connection is due to the fact that Molina, in 1782, gave the name Poca /eonina to the same ‘species, as represented on the coast of Chili, notwithstanding the fact that he knew that Linnzus had previously (1758) bestowed the same name (Phoca Jeonina) upon the Sea Elephant (now Mzrounga leonina auct.). A large number of specific names have been based, since 1782, on the sea lions of the coasts and islands of southern South America, and from these it is necessary to replace the name /eontva of Molina and Péron. The first of these, in order of time, is (1) Poca flavescens, given by Shaw in 1800, and founded on the eared seal of Pennant. Pennant’s description was based on a young otary in the Leverian Museum, only about two feet in length, said to have come from the Straits of Magellan. It is entirely indeterminable from the description, but the locality, if correctly indicated, leads to the inference that it was more likely a young sea lion than a fur seal; and this being the case, it may be hypothetically referred to the genus Ofarza, to which it has been provisionally assigned by the "Voy. aux Terr. Austr., II, 1816, pp. 37-40, passim. I12 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. majority of writers for the last fifty years; but Gray, in 1871, referred it to Phocarctos hookeri.' The name flavescens evidently rests on a basis too unsatisfactory to warrant its use for any species. In 1820 Blainville’? described and figured the skull of a sea lion found by him in the Hunterian Museum of London, bearing the legend ‘Sea Lion from the island of Tinian, by Commodore Byron.” His description of this skull is given in considerable detail, and his figure, though rough, aids in determining beyond doubt its reference to the sea lion (Ofaria) of southern South America. On a later page he bestowed upon it the name Phoca byronia. This skull, fortunately, was afterward deposited in the British Museum, and finally transferred to the osteological collection of the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, where it is still preserved. It has been examined by numerous competent authorities, as G. Cuvier, Nilsson, Gray, Peters, Burmeister and Flower, who have uniformly referred it to Ofaria jubata auct. Gray says (Suppl. Cat. Seals and Whales, 18717 p: 13) -°" 1 cannot see any difference between the skull in the College of Surgeons, on which Poca Byronia was founded and those [of O¢farvia jubata| in the British Museum.” Flower, in his Catalogue of the Osteological Collections of the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, enters this skull with the following comment: ‘This specimen was brought to England in 1769, by Commodore Byron, as is stated, from Tinian, one of the Ladrone Islands, and was for many years preserved in the British Museum. It is not improbable that there has been a mistake as to the locality assigned to it, or that it was brought to the island by some human agency or accident, as living Sea-Lions of this species have never been met with nearer Tinian than the Galapagos Islands. There is no mention of it in Byron’s published narrative. De Blainville has given a very incorrect description and figure of this specimen in the ‘Journal de Physique,’ tome xci., pp. 287 and 300 (1820), under the name of Phoca byronia, whence Phoca byronti, Desmarest, Mammalogie, p. 240 (1820).’’— Flower, 2 c., II, p. 189. As stated by Flower, the skull could not, therefore, as alleged, have come from the Island of Tinian, one of the Mariana or Ladrone Islands (lat. 15° N.), which are situated far outside of the range of any known *Suppl. Cat. Seals and Whales, 1871, p. 14. ?Journ. de Phys., XCI, Oct., 1820, p. 287, fig. 3 of plate dated Dec., 1820; named Phoca byronia on p. 300. ie Pera Ty Vee es —— ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDA. WAL Pinniped. The essential facts of the case, then, are: (1) The skull on which the name Phoca byronza was based is beyond doubt a skull of the sea lion (Ofaria gubata auct.) found on the islands and coasts of southern South America; (2) that it is also the first name exclusively based on that animal that is perfectly identifiable and not preoccupied. It is hence necessarily the only available name for this species, which must stand as Otaria byronia (Blainville).' Several subsequent names also relate exclusively to this species, which of course become synonyms of Ofaria byronia. Among these may be mentioned Ofaria molossina Lesson & Garnot, 1826, based on the Sea Lion of the Falkland Islands, very fully described and well figured in the Zoology of the Voyage of the Cogwz//e, from a semi-adult male specimen. Other synonyms were added the following year (1827) by Lesson, as Otaria pernetty:, based on Pernetty’s account of the Falkland Island Sea Lion, and Platyrhyncus uranie, based on the “ Otarie Guérin”’ of Quoy and Gaimard,—a young or female sea lion, also from the Falkland Islands. In 1841 Miiller added Ofavia platyrhinchus, based on the type of F. Cuvier’s genus Platyrhyncus, and Otarta chilensis, based on specimens obtained by Philippi on the coast of Chili. In 1844 von Tschudi added Otaria ulloe = the female of Ofaria byronta (= jubata auct.) as recognized by Peters, Gray, and Burmeister. Peters in 1866 added Ofavza godeffroyi, from the Chincha Islands, off the coast of Peru, which he later considered doubtfully distinct from O. 7wbatfa, and to which it was subsequently re- ferred by Gray and Burmeister as representing the male of that species. Gray, in 1871, described an Ofavia minor and an Ofaria pygmea, both based on skulls from unknown localities, and previously referred by him to O. jubata. Finally, Philippi, in 1892, added three more, namely, Otaria velutina, O. fulva and O. rufa, besides reviving O. molosstna and O. chilensts of previous authors, making six species recognized by him from the coast and islands of Chili. His descriptions and figures of most of them are based on very young specimens, some of them still retaining part of the milk dentition. ‘Desmarest, the same year (Mamm., I, 1820, p. 240), gave a description of the same skull, under the name Phoca byronit, “ espéce nouvelle, fondée par M. de Blainville,”’ etc., his account hav- ing been evidently based on Blainville’s manuscript description. He believed it to be allied to the Sea Elephant, as did Lesson in 1827. Evidently Desmarest’s account was written before Blainville’s description was published, and in the uncertainty as to which account was actually first published, it is best to consider Blainville as the author of the species and accept his form of the name. 114 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. NoTE ON THE NAME OF THE NORTHERN SEA LION. As already said, Phoca jubata Schreber was based primarily on the Zeo marinus of Steller, the description being almost wholly from Steller, with references to the Sea Lion of Pernetty ; and as Steller did not figure the Sea Lion, as he did the Sea Bear, Schreber copied Pernetty’s execrable figure of the Sea Lion of the Falkland Islands, supposing, as did subse- quent naturalists generally for the next fifty years, that the Northern and Southern Sea Lions were specifically the same. In 1816, as stated above, Péron asserted their specific distinctness, restricted the name jzbata to the Northern Sea Lion, and gave what he evidently supposed to be a new name, /eouznva, to the Southern Sea Lion, and transferred both from Poca to his new genus Ofarza. As already explained, the name Ofaria /eonina is untenable on account of Molina’s having previously called the same animal Phoca leontna, a name preoccupied by Linnzus’s Phoca leonina for the Sea Elephant. Lesson in 1862 renamed the Northern Sea Lion Ofaria steller?, and the name s¢e//ert has since been in almost universal use for this animal. In view of Péron’s restriction, twelve years before, of the name jwdata to this species, the name s/ed/eri obviously becomes a synonym of jwéata, and the correct name of Steller’s Sea Lion is Eumetopias jubata (Schreber). Unfortunate as it may seem, the history of the case shows the necessity of the change, under the current rules of nomenclature. Earty HIsTORY OF THE NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN SEA LIONS. The case of the Northern and Southern Sea Lions, often known respec- tively as Steller’s Sea Lion and Forster's Sea Lion, furnishes an instructive illustration of the struggles of zodlogists in arriving at a fair knowledge of animals long known only from the vague accounts of explorers and travellers, who, while perhaps eminent in other ways, were not good nat- uralists. The case of the Fur Seals, or Sea Bears, of the northern and southern hemispheres is equally complicated and interesting, but need not be dealt with at length in this connection; it may suffice to say that the history of these groups is perfectly parallel to that of the Sea Lions. Our knowledge of the northern forms dates, in both cases, from Steller (1751), whose classic memoir on these animals forms a conspicuous landmark in the early history of mammalogy. In his ‘‘De Bestiis Marinis”’ both ~ a, ef ene — | ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIID:. I15 the Sea Lions and the Sea Bears were made known with admirable detail and clearness, and for nearly a century this memoir remained our chief source of information respecting them. It was, however, quite different with the large Pinnipeds of the south- ern hemisphere, including the Sea Elephant as well as the Sea Lions and the Sea Bears. They were first made known by the early voyagers to the Southern Seas, as Dampier (1697), Freizer (1717), Anson (1748), Byron (1769), Pernetty (1770), Forster (1777), Cook (1784), Weddell (1825), and others, who gave, however, only very imperfect and erroneous accounts of them; and yet they were taken by systematists many years later as the basis of supposed species, notably by Desmarest (1817 and 1820) and Lesson (1828). Thus each of the South American species was named over and over again by compilers who apparently, in most instances, had never seen a specimen of any of them. The early voyagers appear to have taken home very few specimens, and these were not always correctly labelled as to locality of capture. Thus, as in the case of the Commodore Byron skull, already mentioned, they were sometimes attributed to local- ties remote from the home of any species of Pinniped, and in other cases it was uncertain whether the specimen came from the vicinity of Cape Horn, or the Cape of Good Hope, or the Australian seas, the locality being finally given as the ‘Antarctic Seas,” or as “unknown.” In some cases the specimen consisted of a skin without a skull, sometimes of a very young animal, as in the case of Pennant’s Eared Seal and Buffon’s Petit Phoque; in other cases of a skull without the skin, sometimes adult, sometimes young. While these animals were being slaughtered on their breeding grounds by sealers, for their skins or oil, by the tens of thou- sands annually during the latter part of the eighteenth and early part of the nineteenth centuries, and their habits and haunts had become well known, scarcely a specimen reached any of the scientific museums of Europe, or fell under the observation of competent naturalists. It was not apparently till about 1840 that any mammalogist had had speci- mens of the northern and southern sea lions for comparison, when Miiller found skulls of both in the Berlin Museum, and was able to confirm for the first time their specific distinctions by actual comparison of their skulls. In the Paris and London Museums there were a few skulls of the southern species, but none of the northern, until about 1859, when a skull of this animal reached the British Museum, received from California, and was 116 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. described by Gray as a new species. Neither had he up to that time seen a skull of the northern fur seal.' Till many years after the middle of the nineteenth century no one had opportunity to recognize the great differences due to age and sex that ob- tain in these animals; and it was therefore not strange that when, some years later, isolated skulls from different localities and of different ages began to arrive at the British, Berlin, and other Museums, they should be taken as the basis of supposed distinct species, with the result of adding to the long array of synonyms that now cumber the literature of the subject. It was not till about 1870 that sufficient material for determining the cranial differences due to age and sex began to accumulate, when good series of skulls and skeletons, as well as of skins, of the northern sea lions and fur seals reached the Museum of Comparative Zodlogy at Cambridge, and the National Museum in Washington, and also of the southern forms as represented at the Galapagos Islands. Finally, as I stated in 1880 :* “Of about fifty synonyms pertaining to the Eared Seals, probably two thirds have been based, directly or indirectly, upon differences dependent on sex and age, and the rest upon the defec- tive descriptions of these animals by travellers.” Figures. — The Southern Sea Lion has been figured repeatedly, both as regards the skull and the animal. The early figures are naturally crude and of little value ; the later ones meet all requirements of detail and ac- curacy. In the following enumeration the principal illustrations of the animal and its external features are first mentioned, and then those of the skull and its general anatomy. Animal. —The first published figure of this species is probably that given by Pernetty,* in 1769, based on the sea lion of the Falkland Islands. This, though a wretched caricature, was copied by Schreber to illustrate his Phoca jubata, and this fact constitutes the chief interest and impor- tance of Pernetty’s figure. * Dr. Gray, in 1864 (P. Z. S., 1864, p. 34) said: “Iam not aware that the Leo marinus of Steller exists in any Museum.” In 1868, he wrote as follows: ‘When I published my ‘ Catalogue of the Seals in the British Museum,’ in 1850, I was satisfied from Steller’s description that the species he described from the Arctic regions were distinct from those found in the southern seas; and when I at last succeeded in obtaining specimens and skulls from the northern regions of the Pacific, I not only found that my idea was confirmed, but that they did not belong to the same genera.’ — Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), I, Feb., 1868, p. 99. *Hist. N. Am. Pinnipeds, 1880, p. 227, footnote. * Voy. aux les Iles Malouines, IT, 1769, pl. viii, fig. 1. a ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIID. ie) In 1782 a fairly good representation was published by Buffon! from a drawing made by Forster, also at the Falkland Islands. The species was again illustrated by Lesson and Garnot in 1826,2 who gave a colored figure of a young animal from the Falkland Islands, under the name Ofaria molossina. This figure was copied by Hamilton in his “Carnivorous Am- phibia.” Hamilton gave also in 1839 a poor figure of what he called ‘The Sea-Lion of Pernetty,’’* based on a specimen in the Royal Museum of Edinburgh, which, he says, “was brought from the antarctic regions some years ago.” Tschudi in 1844-46,‘ gave a figure of his Ofavza ulloe, from a young example about four feet long, from the coast of Peru. The next figure appears’to have been published by Sclater,> an excel- lent representation of a young male in the Garden of the Zoblogical So- ciety of London, ‘captured on the sea shore near Cape Horn.” Other figures from life of the same specimen, according to Gray and Murie, were published in “ Land and Water,” “The Illustrated London News,” and ‘The Boys’ Own Magazine”’ (VI, No. 33, p24). The cutfrom “Land and Water’ was republished by Dr. Murie in his memoir on the Anatomy of Ofaria jubata,® and duly acknowledged. He also gave other text cuts illustrating (fig. 2, 7 ¢., p. 539) its manner of swallowing food ; a group (fig. 3, 2. ¢., p. 556) of Sea Lions in a variety of positions on land and in the water, from drawings made from the living animal in the Zoological So- ciety’s Gardens ; and also additional attitudes (fig. 4,2 ¢., p. 575) assumed, drawn from life. In the plates accompanying Dr. Murie’s admirable memoir are given figures of the fore and hind flippers, and of the hinder portion of the body, showing the external genital organs, the ear, eye, muzzle and throat, and the skin ridges on the breast (Zn65. WIL, lll: dsevan: Ixviii and Ixix). Beddard, in his memoir “ On the Structure of Hooker’s Sea Lion” (Arctocephalus hookeri),” gave a side view of the head, and a front view of the muzzle of Ofaria “jubata,” in comparison with views of similar parts in Arctocephalus antarcticus and Zalophus californianus. These figures are of special interest as showing the short ears and the "Hist. Nat., Suppl., VI, 1782, pl. xlviii. ? Voy. Coquille, Zool., I, 1826, pl. iii. * Amphib. Carn., 1839, pl. xix. ‘Fauna Peruana, 1844-46, pl. vi. * Proc. Zodl. Soc. Lond., 1866, p- 8, woodcut, under the name Ofaria hookeri, by error, * Trans. Zool. Soc. Lond., VII, part xvi, Jan., 1872, pp. 527-596, pll. Ixvii-lxxiii ; ié¢d., VIII, part xvi, June, 1874, pp. 501-582, pll. Ixxv—Ixxxii. "Trans. Zool. Soc. Lond., XII, pt. x, 1890, pp. 370-374, figs. 2 and 5. 118 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. character of the nose-pad in Ofavia as compared with those -parts in Phocarctos and Arctocephalus. The pictorial history of this animal, as regards its external characters, was further supplemented by Philippi, in 1892, by a series of very inar- tistic and unimportant figures, based in large part on immature examples from Chili. Skull and General Anatomy.—The earliest figure of the skull, and one of special importance from a nomenclatural standpoint, was pub- lished by Blainville in 1820,’ since on this skull is based the name Phoca byronia ; this figure, though rather unsatisfactory, is readily iden- tifiable as that of O. 7wbata auct., as is shown further by his description of it. In addition to this, the skull is still (or was recently) in the Museum of the College of Surgeons of London, and, as already stated (antea, p. 112), has been repeatedly examined and identified by compe- tent authorities as belonging to this species. In fig. 4 of the same plate Blainville figures the dentition (side view) of another skull of this species under the name of ‘‘ Sea lion from islands Falckland.”” The first skull was erroneously supposed to have come from the Island of Tinian, one of the Mariana group. The next figure of a skull that seems identifiable with the Southern Sea Lion is that given by G. Cuvier in 1823 in his ‘“Ossemens fossiles,’’? a side view of a “ téte adult du Cap” (/ c., p. 222), which appears to be the same skull as that figured by F. Cuvier in 1824,° the side view given by F. Cuvier corresponding with the figure given by G. Cuvier. F. Cuvier’s figures e and f of this skull, particularly fig. 2, 4 of the ventral surface, leave no doubt of its reference to the southern sea lion. This author, however, does not state the locality or history of either of the skulls fig- ured by him as the types respectively of his ‘‘ Platyrynque”’ and “ Arcto- céphale.”’ As said above, and also earlier in this paper (avtea, p. 104), there is no doubt of the identity of his type skull of the Platyrhinque with the Ofaria gubata of modern authors. Hamilton, in 1839, in the volume of Jardine’s ‘“‘ Naturalist’s Library”’ devoted to the ‘Amphibious Carnivora,” gave a rude side view of a skull he attributed to the ‘“Sea-lion of Steller’ (p. 232), but which is unques- ‘Journ, de Phys., XCI, 1820, pl. (with the number for December, EB20); fig. 3. Oss. foss., V, pt. i, 1823, pl. xviii, fig. 4. *Mém. du Mus. d’Hist. Nat., XI, 1824, pl. xv, fig. 2, d, 2, f. ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDA. 119 tionably, as is his description of the skull, referable to the southern sea lion. The history of the specimen is not given, and the figure has no special value. In 1840 Blainville figured the skeleton, and also the skull and denti- tion! of a very old male, four views, one third natural size, being given of the skull. The skeleton, it is stated, came from the coast of Chili, as did also the skull, the latter having been obtained by Dr. Néboux on the cruise of the Véuus. In 1844, in the Zodlogy of the Avebus and Terror,? Gray gave two views, profile and from below, of the skull of a young specimen. This is presumably the same skull figured by him ten years later in his ‘‘Cata- logue of Seals in the British Museum”’ (p. 46), apparently from the ‘west coast of South America” (cf 7 c., p. 48), under the name Ofaria /eonina, and again republished in his ‘Catalogue of Seals and Whales”’ (1866, p. 58). In 1866 Peters gave three views of the skull of Ofavza godeffroy7* and also three of a skull of Ofaria ulloe Tschudi,‘ both of which species he later referred to O. jubata auct. In 1872-1874 Dr. Murie, in his well-known memoir (Z. c.) on the “ Anat- omy of the Sea Lion (Ofaréa jubata),” publishedan admirable series of illus- trations of not only the skull but of the general anatomy, including the soft parts as well as the skeleton. Two wood cuts in the text’ (VIII, p. 506) give comparative views of the palatal surface of the skull of the male and female, and plates Ixxv and Ixxvi a series of figures of the skull of a young male, including sectional views. Plate xxvii illustrates the skele- ton and numerous separate bones, and a series of skulls of different ages, from a fortnight old to old adults, in profile and from above, showing ‘progressive growth.’ Five additional plates ® are devoted to the myology, and five others’ to the brain, sensory, vascular, digestive, urinary, and genital organs. In 1883, Burmeister, in the Atlas (livr. 2, pl. vill, 17 figures) to his 'Ostéographie, Les Phoques, pll. iii, vi and ix. ?Mamm., pl. xvii, figs. 1 and 2. *Monatsb. Akad. Berlin, May, 1866, pl. i. * Thid., Nov., 1866, pl. i. ° First published in Proc, Zool. Soc. Lond., 1869, p. 103. °Trans. Zodl. Soc. Lond., VII, pll. lxix—Ixxiii. Op. cit., VIII, pll. Ixxviti-lxxxii. 120 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. ‘Description Physique de la République Argentine,’ gave a series of figures of skulls of old and young of both sexes, showing individual and sexual variation, and also variation due to age. This is a most important series of figures, based on specimens from the Lobos Islands, off the mouth of the Rio de la Plata. In 1892 Philippi figured a number of skulls, including those of three supposed new species, all, however, based on very young animals, several of the skulls showing part of the milk dentition, besides other features of immaturity. Otaria byronia has thus been very fully and satisfactorily illustrated as regards both its external characters and internal structure. Genus ARCTOCEPHALUS F. Cuvier. Arctocéphale, F. Cuvier, Mém. du. Mus. d’Hist. Nat., XI, 1824, 205, pl. AVM AG, Opes Arctocephalus F. Cuvier, Dict. des Sci. Nat., XX XIX, 1826, 554. Same as above. Type, ‘“ Phoca ursina’’ = Phoca antarctica Thunberg. Flalarctus Gill, Proc. Essex Inst., V, 1866, 7, 11. Type, 47ctocephalus delalandt Gray = Phoca antarctica Thunberg. Arctophoca Peters, Monatsb. Akad. Berlin, May, 1866, 276 (subgenus of Otarta). Type, Otaria | Arctophoca| philppu, sp. nov. Euotaria Gray, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), IV, Oct., 1869, 269 (‘‘ South America’’) ; Suppl. Cat. Seals and Whales, 1871, 20. Type and only species, 4rctocephalus nigrescens Gray = Phoca falklandica Shaw. Gysophoca Gray, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), IV, Oct. 1869, 269 (“Australia”); Suppl. Cat. Seals and Whales, 1871, 24. First spe- cies, Otaria (Arctocephalus) cinerea Peters=? Otaria cinerea Péron, 1816 = Ofaria cinerea Quoy & Gaim., 1830=Ofaria forstert Lesson, 1828. The only species referred by F. Cuvier (2 c., 1826) to his genus Arctocephalus is his “ Arctocephalus ursinus ; Ursus marinus, Steller, Novi comment. petrop., 11, p. 331,’ which he elsewhere mentions as ‘““ Phoca ursina, Linn.,”’ and distinctly says is the type of his genus 47c/o- cephalus.'_ On this account many subsequent writers have given the type of Arctocephalus as Phoca ursina. Under this name, however, Cuvier associated not only Steller’s Sea Bear, but the Fur Seal observed by Per- 1Mém. du Mus., XI, 1824, p. 208; Dict. des Sci. Nat., XX XIX, 1826, p. 553. ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDé. 121 netty at the Falkland Islands, and the Fur Seal of the Cape of Good Hope, (2. c., 1826, p. 554), —in other words, all the fur seals then known. As F. Cuvier figured the type skull of his genus 4rctocephalus, his figure must determine the type of the genus. Furthermore, it is a well-known fact that no skull of Steller’s Ursus marinus reached any European museum till many years after Cuvier established his genus Arctocephalus ; it was thus impossible that this species should have served as the basis of his figure and description of the skull. Besides, his figure does not leave the least doubt as to its being, not this species, but some one of the several southern species of fur seal. Cuvier, himself, does not intimate in either of his two accounts of the genus 4rctocephalus the source of his speci- men. In another work,! of about the same date, he describes the denti- tion of certain of the seals, and says: ‘‘J’ai tiré cette description de une téte qui avait appartenu a l’ours marin (fhoca ursina), et qui avait été rapportée du cap de Bonne-Espérance par M. Lalande”’; also his brother G. Cuvier, in 1823,? says he had received from M. Delalande ‘‘deux squel- lettes de jeune Age, et une téte adulte de cette espéce’” from the Cape; this adult skull he describes and figures (of. ce, pl. xviii, fig. 5). As these were the only skulls of this genus in the Paris museums at the time F. Cuvier established 4rctocephalus, it must be assumed, aside from the evidence afforded by the figure, that his type was not Poca ursina Linn., but the Fur Seal of the Cape of Good Hope, referred to by F. Cuvier? as the “O. [tarie] de Delalande,”’ and later named Arctocephalus dela- landit by Gray.t It had, however, been previously described by Thun- berg in 1811 as Phoca antarctica.’ The type of Arctocephalus F. Cuvier is thus Phoca antarctica Thunberg = Arctocephalus antarcticus (Thunb.) Gray.® * GENERIC CHARACTERS. — Facial portion of skull slender, elongated, pointed, gently declined. Molars “*=%, large in comparison with those of Callotaria. Arctocephalus is well distinguished from Ca//otarza, the only other genus ‘Des Dents des Mammiféres, 1825, p. 123. 2 Ossem. foss., V, 1823, p. 220. 3 Dict. de Sci. Nat., XXXIX, 1826, p. 558. *Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1859, p. 107, pl. Ixix. 5Meém. Acad. St. Petersb., III, 1811, 322. 6 Arctocephalus antarcticus Gray, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., 4th Ser., IV, Oct., 1869, p. 266; Suppl. Cat. Seals and Whales, 1871, 17. 122 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. of Fur Seals, by the slenderness and declivity of the rostral portion of the skull and the much more elongated and relatively narrower general form of the entire skull. The cranial differences between these two groups are, however, not nearly so great as those which separate Ofaria from Eumetopias and Zalophus. Dr. Peters, in his last synopsis of the Eared Seals, referred all of the Fur Seals to the genus 4rcfocephalus, and placed all the Hair Seals, except Ofavia byronza, in the genus Eumefopias, thus recognizing only three genera of Otaries— Ofaria, Eumetopias and Arc- tocephalus. The number of species of 4rctocephalus, as well as their nomenclature, has been a subject much in dispute, owing to lack of sufficient material to determine the status of the supposed species, and to the unsatisfactory basis of many of the earlier names. Peters, in 1877, recognized seven species of southern Fur Seals, but several of them rest on very unsatis- factory evidence. In 1892'I considered that six were fairly entitled to recognition ; another, 4rctocephalus townsendi Merriam, had not then been described. They are, adding the latter, as follows: 1. Arctocephalus townsendi Merriam. Guadalupe Island, off Lower California. 2. Arctocephalus philippit (Peters). Islands of Juan Fernandez and Mas a Fuera, and probably adjacent coast and islands of western South America. 3. Arctocephalus australis (Zimm.). Falkland Islands, Straits of Ma- gellan, and probably South Georgian Islands. 4. Arctocephalus antarcticus (Thunb.). West coast of South Africa and adjacent islands. 5. Arctocephalus gazella (Peters). Kerguelen Island, and St. Paul and Amsterdam Islands, and probably the Crozet Islands. 6. Arctocephalus forstert (Lesson). Coasts of New Zealand, Australia and Tasmania, and the islands to the southward and eastward. Very little new light has since been thrown upon the subject, as regards the number and exact definition of the species. Facts of considerable im- portance having an indirect bearing on the matter have been developed through the Fur Seal Investigations of the seal herds in Bering Sea and the North Pacific ; it having been established that the several herds which frequent respectively for breeding purposes the Pribilof Islands, the Kurile ‘Proc. Fur Seal Arbitration, Vol. II, Appendix to Case of U. S., I, 1892, pp. 373-375. : € ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDA. 123 Islands, and the Commander Islands, have separate feeding as well as breeding grounds, and do not mingle even during migrations; and also that the animals composing these separate herds are so far differentiated in external and other characters as to be considered worthy of recognition in nomenclature under separate names. Thus instead of the northern Fur Seals being all referred as formerly to a single species, they are considered as separable into three closely related species, under the names respec- tively, of (1) Callotarta ursina (Linn.) of Bering Island, the real Sea Bear (Ursus marinus) of Steller; (2) Callotarta alascana (Jordan & Clark) of the Pribilof Islands ; and (3) Ca//otaria curilensts (Jordan & Clark).' The differences, so far as known, separating these forms are sufficient to render even their peltries distinguishable. This being the case it is more than probable that the southern Fur Seal herds that congregate at different breeding resorts would also show similar differentiation, if material repre- senting them could be brought together in sufficient amount for satisfac- tory comparison. It does not, for example, seem probable that the Fur Seals of the Galapagos Archipelago can be strictly the same as those breeding on the Falkland Islands,’ or even those of Juan Fernandez and Mas a Fuera Islands ; or that the herds that formerly resorted in immense numbers to the Shetland, South Georgian and other Antarctic Islands south of Cape Horn may not have presented minor differences from those whose breeding resorts were in much lower latitudes. In the absence of satisfactory material, however, for such comparison the Fur Seals of southern South America and adjacent islands will be treated in the present connection as belonging to two species, under the names Arcfocephalus australis (Zimm.), of which the type locality is the Falkland Islands, and Arctocephalus philippit (Peters), of which the type locality is Juan Fer- nandez Island. Both species are represented in the material at hand by fifteen skulls, of which four are referable to 4. australis and eleven to 4. philippi; ten of the latter are from the Galapagos Archipelago, while one purports to have come from “Straits of Magellan.” The two South American species may be readily recognized by their marked cranial differences, the skull of 4. austva@s having the rostral Jordan and Clark, Report Fur Seal Investigation, I, 1898, p. 45, and III, 1899, p. 3. *Since this article was prepared, early in 1902, the Galapagos Fur Seal has been separated as Arctocephalus galapagoensis by Heller (Proc. Cal. Acad. Sci., 3d Ser., Zool., III, 1904, p. 245), but on very unsatisfactory evidence of its distinctness. See further, p. 134. 124 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. portion very short with short nasals, while the same part in 4. pAhilippie is relatively greatly lengthened, with correspondingly long nasals. In brief, 4. australis is a short-nosed species and A. philippit a long-nosed species. These features also involve the whole contour of the skull, so that one is markedly brachycephalic and the other strongly dolichoceph- alic. The two species are so distinct that they represent two very good subgenera, as recognized by Peters in 1866, 4. phiizpfit being the type of his subgenus 4rctophoca. A very distinct species of this genus, not previously known to exist north of the equator, was described by Dr. Merriam, in 1897, from Guadalupe Island, off the coast of Lower California, from weathered skulls collected by Mr. C. H. Townsend. These skulls, kindly loaned to me for comparison with skulls of 4rctocephalus from the Straits of Ma- gellan and the Galapagos Archipelago, prove of such interest that it has been deemed desirable to give figures of them for comparison with those of their southern allies, and to republish in this connection Dr. Merriam’s original description and historical summary of this nearly extirpated animal, with additional historical matter. - ARCTOCEPHALUS AUSTRALIS (Zimm.). (Plates XV, Fig. 1; XVI, Fig. 2; XVII, Fig. 2, Skulls.) Falkland Isle Seal, Pennant, Hist. Quad., II, 1781, 521. Specimen in Mus. Roy. Soc. London, from ‘“ Falkland Iles.” Phoca australis Zimmermann, Geogr. Gesch., III, 1782, 276, based on the ‘Falkland Seal, Pennant, II, 521.” Arctocephalus austrais Allen, Hist. N. Am. Pinn., 1880, 193, 210; Fur Seal,.Arbitr., Appen. Case U:-S., \1,, 1892, 374.—— Thomas; PaZ. S:;, 1881, 4, Straits of Magellan.— Turner, Zo6]. Challenger Exped., pt. Ixvill, 1888, 39, 82, pl. vi, figs. 1, 3, 5, pl. vii, parts of skeleton. — Townsend, Rep. Fur Seal Invest., III, 1899, 274, pl. xxxv, Lobos Islands. — Albert, Act. Soc. scient. du Chili, XI, Dec. 1901, 224-257. General history, description, synonymy, habits, Chilian laws for its protection, etc. Ofaria austvats Philippi, An. Mus. nac. Chile, I, Zool., 1892, 6, 40, pl. xi, fig. 2, animal, pl. xxi, skull. Punta Arenas, Straits of Magellan. Phoca falklandica Shaw, Gen. Zodl., I, pt. ii, 1800, 256. Based on Pen- nant’s ‘‘ Falkland Isle Seal.” — Weddell, Voy. towards the South Pole, ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDAE. 125 1825, pp. 137-142, account of habits and products, especially in re- lation to the South Shetland Islands. Otavia falklandica Desmarest, Dict. d’Hist. Nat., XXV, 1817, 601 ; Mamm., I, 1820, 252. Based on Pennant and Shaw. — Hamilton, Ann. Nat. Hist., II, Oct., 1838, 81, pl. iv (name Ofaria falklandica on the plate only); Jardine’s Nat. Libr., VI, Amphibia, 1839, 271, pl. xxv (based on two stuffed specimens in Mus. Univ. of Edinburgh, brought from the Falkland Islands by Capt. Weddell).— Peters, Monatsb. K. Akad. Berlin, 1866, 273.—Sclater, P. Z. S., 1868, 528 (Falkland Islands). — Burmeister, Zeitsch. f. gesammte Naturwissens. Halle, XXXI, 1868, 299. Otaria (Arctophoca) falklandica Peters, Monatsb. K. Akad. Berlin, 1866, 672. Arctocephalus falklandicus Gray, List Mamm. Brit. Mus., 1843, 103; Cat. Seals in Brit. Mus., 1850, 42 (in part); Cat. Seals and Whales, 1866, 55; Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (4), I, 1868, 103; Suppl. Cat. Seals and Whales, 1871, 25; ‘‘Hand-List of Seals, 1874.’ — Burmeister, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (3), XVIII, 1866, 99, pl. ix, fig. 1-4, skull (Buenos Ayres).—Allen, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zodl., II, 1870, 45.— Cunningham, Nat. Hist. Strait Magellan, 1871, 179, Straits of Magellan. — Burmeister, Descrip. phys. Rép. Argent., III, 1879, 528- 530, Atlas, 2™ fasc., 1883, pl. x, skulls and teeth, showing variation with age, sex, etc.— Peters, Monatsb. K. Akad. Berlin, 1875, 393- 399; 1877, 505-507. — Figueira, An. nac. de Montevideo, II, 1894, 202, islets off Maldonado. Arctophoca falklandica Peters, Monatsb. K. Akad. Berlin, 1871, 566. — Goeldie (in Nehring), Sitzungsb. Ges. Naturf. Freunde zu Berlin, 1877, 209, near Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Arctocephalus ursinus Gray, List. Mamm. Brit. Mus., 1843, 103 — only the Falkland Island reference. Otarie de Péron, Blainville, Journ. de Phys., XCI., 1820, 295, in part. Skin of a young specimen from Iles Malouines, afud G. Cuvier, Ossem:. foss.;. V.-1623., 222. Otaria hauvillit Lesson, Dict. class. d’ Hist. Nat., XIII, 1828, 425. From Cuvier and Blainville, as above. Ofaria shaw Lesson, Dict. class. d’Hist. Nat., XIII, 1828, 425 = Phoca SJalklandica Shaw. 126 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. Arctocephalus nigrescens Gray, Zoé). Erebus and Terror, t. f—(cf Gray, P. Z.S., 1859, 109, 360 (based on a young skull, from “Falkland Islands?” ; Cat. Seals and Whales, 1866, 52 (same specimen) ; Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (3), XVIII, Sept., 1886, 236 (same specimen, here made type of a subgenus Ewofaria) ; Suppl. Cat. Seals and Whales, 1871; 20: Otaria (Arctophoca) nigrescens Peters, Monatsb. K. Akad. Berlin, 1866, 669. ‘Otaria nigrescens (Gray)’’ Burmeister, Zeits. Naturwissensch. Halle, XXXI, 1868, 198, in text ; referred by Burmeister to 4. Salklandica (Shaw). Arctophoca nigrescens Peters, Monatsb. K. Akad. Berlin, 1871, 564. Euotaria nigrescens Gray, Ann. & Mag. Nat. His. (4), I, Feb., 1868, 106 (several Falkland Island specimens mentioned) ; zbzd., IV, Oct., 1869, 264 (three skulls from Desolation Island, southwest coast of Pata- -gonia). Arctocephalus grayit Scott, Mamm. Recent and Extinct, 1873, 19. Avow- edly a new name for 4rctocephalus falklandicus auct. FEtuotaria lativostris Gray, Hand-List Seals, 1874, 37, pl. xxvii, skull. Based ona skull supposed to have come from Falkland Islands, previously referred by Gray to his 4rctocephalus nigrescens. Arctocephalus (Arctophoca) gracis Nehring, Arch. f. Naturg., 1887, i, 92, pl. ii (skull, young). Rio Tramandahy, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. ? Otaria brachydactyla Philippi, An. Mus. nac. Chile, I, Zool., 1892, 6, 43, pl. xiii, fig. 2, animal, pl. xxii, skull, very young, with the milk dentition ; length of animal, 900 mm. += Chonos Archipelago. Arctocephalus falclandicus var. gracilis Nehring, Sitzungsb. Ges. Naturf. Freunde zu Berlin, 1877, 142—coast of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. External Characters.—Pelage of two kinds of hair—long, coarse, blackish overhair tipped with gray or yellowish gray, giving a grizzled effect, except on the ventral surface, where the hairs are without gray tips; beneath this is the thick soft brownish underfur, lighter at the tips and darker basally. In the absence of specimens it is almost impossible to give a satisfac- tory description of the external characters of the South American Fur Seals. What the external distinctions may be, can be determined only by ewe eS a AO OS OO ED see me ip lt al lt in Fe, la i al el le, NT TS ALLEN: MAMMALIA: OTARIIDA. 127 an examination of a good series of specimens from various localities. In general coloration, ears and foot structure, they do not appear to differ greatly from the northern species, although they must differ markedly (in life) in physiognomy and more or less in the color and texture of the pelage. Skull. —Skull short and broad, the brain-case subquadrate, the anteor- bital region very short, not greatly depressed, the very short nasals only very slightly sloping and the extreme front border slightly raised, giving a marked retroussé effect; zygomatic arches broadly expanded, the palate strongly concave and the posterior nares narrow; sagittal crest slightly developed. The skull as a whole is shorter and broader than in 4. Ahz/- tppi. The unworn teeth are distinctly tricuspid, there being a distinct, low, pointed cusp at the anterior base of the main cusp, and a similar one on its posterior border. Teeth relatively much smaller than in 4. pheleppit. The following table of comparative measurements (p. 128) of four skulls each of 4. australis and A. philippit serve to illustrate the chief points of cranial difference in the two species. General Flistory.—The first introduction of the present species into the literature of natural history appears to have been made by Pennant in 1781, in his “ History of Quadrupeds”’ (Vol. II, p. 521), where, under the name ‘Falkland Isle Seal,”” he described a young fur seal in the Mu- seum of the Royal Society sent “from the Fa/kland isles.” Although his description is very incomplete, it has always been considered as refer- able to the Falkland Island Fur Seal. Pennant’s account became the following year (1782) the basis of Zimmermann’s Phoca australis. In 1800 the same description formed the basis of Phoca falklandica Shaw, under which name the species was commonly known till 1880, when Zimmermann’s long-forgotten earlier name was revived for it. In 1828 Lesson renamed Phoca falklandica, calling it Otaria shawit, and also, in the same year, named the ‘‘Otarie de Péron”’ of Blainville, based on another young specimen from the Falkland Islands (‘Iles Malouines’’), Ofavta hauviliit, making the third name based on young specimens of the Falkland Island Fur Seal. The two Cuviers and vari- ous other writers had previously referred the Southern Fur Seals to Phoca ursina, or to some vernacular equivalent, believing they were not specifically different from the Fur Seals of the North, the Ursus marinus of Steller. 128 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. COMPARATIVE MEASUREMENTS OF THE SKULLS OF Arctocephalus australis AND A. philippii. Arctocephalus australis, Straits of Magellan. Arctocephalus philippit. Strait of Hood Isl., Galapagos. 23331 U.S.N.M.) M. C. Z. | M. C. Z. |Magellan. ] al 36664 1125 1126 |U.S,N.M./U.S.N.M.|U.S.N.M.|U.S.N.M. o ad. go ad. & ad. 23332 23279 23281 23280 gad. g ad. gad. gad. Basalblenpthis cecaca-eccame- af i iJ y = » : a (vow. 111) : ' . 2 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.III RAE Wie R Weber del Werner & Winter, Frankfort ?M., lith HIPPOCAMELUS BISULCUS PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE VIL KERODON AUSTRALIS and CTENOMYS OSGOODI. Fig. 1-16. KeEropon austratis: Skull, # ad., x 4. Upper Rio Chico, near Cordilleras, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,180 Fig. 2-26. Crrenomys oscoopr: Type skull, ad., xX +. Upper Rio Chico, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,149. (Clenomys robustus in text ; for change of name see Postscript, p. 191.) , . Fig. 3-36. Crenomys oscoopr: Skull of ad., X +. Upper Rio Chico, Pata- gonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,143. (VOL. 111) PAGE 38 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.III. | PLATE VII rtoM., Lith Frankfo Werner & Winier, R.Weber del KERODON & CTENOMYS. PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION: OF PLATE, VEL CTENOMYS SERICEUS and CTENOMYS COLBURNI. Fig. 1-1. Crenomys sertceus: Skull, 9 ad. x}. Mayer Basin, upper Rio Chico, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,195 Fig. 2-26. Crenomys sertceus: Skull, 3‘ ad., x ¢. Mayer Basin, upper Rio Chico, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,1809. Fig. 3-34. CrTenomys coLpurni: Skull, 9 ad., X +. Basalt Cajions, Pata- gonia. No. 78, Colburn Collection ‘ : : : Fig. 4-46. Crenomys coLtpurNnt: Type skull, fi ad., x}. Basalt Caiions, Patagonia. No. 147, Colburn Collection. (VOL. 111) PAGE 40 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS WOME allies PLATE VIIL. 2 Werner & Winter, Frankfort 2M., li Fig. 1-14. Fig. 2-20. Fig. 3-36. Fig. 4-40. Fig. 5-50. Fig. 6-64. PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE IX. ELiGmoponTIA, Oryzomys, and OxyMycTERUS. ELIGMODONTIA MORGANI: Skull, o&' ad. X #. Cape Fairweather, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 92,218 : ; ; : OryYZzOMYS MAGELLANICUS: Skull, d' ad., XZ. Upper Rio Chico, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,275 : P OxymycTEerus LANosus: Skull, 9 ad, x4. Teeth figured on Plate X, Fig. 6-62. Cordilleras, el iat Rio Chico, Pata- gonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,211. OxyMYCTERUS MicroTis: Type skull, 9 ad., X 7. Tene poe on Plate X, Fig. 7-7a. Cordilleras, head al Rio Chico, Pata- agonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,234 : : : : OxymycTerus Inca: Type skull, Q ad., 2. Mavipis, Bolivia. Am. Mus. No. 16,489. OxymycTERus juLIac#: Type skull, & ad., x. Inca Mines, Peru. Am. Mus. No. 15,804. (VOL. 111.) PAGE 53 47 83 84 “PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL III. EA SEs In F.v.lterson del. « Werner & Winter, Frankfort?M., lith ELIGMODONTIA, ORYZOMYS & OXYMYCTERUS Fig. Fig. ie | SE . 3-34. 4-40. . 9-94. - 10-104. PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE X. OxymycTErRus, ELicmMoponT1a, and Oryzomys. OxymycTerus apicatis: Type skull, 9 ad.; skull, X 2; teeth, x4; teeth greatly worn. Inca Mines, Peru. Am. Mus. No. 16,064. ELIGMODONTIA MORGANI: Upper and lower teeth of of ad., X +; teeth much worn. Skull figured on Plate IX, Fig. 1-14. Rio Coy, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 92,218 ELIGMODONTIA MORGANI: Upper and lower teeth of Q juv., with unworn teeth, for comparison with Fig. 1. Rio Coy, Pata- gonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 92,226. ORYZOMYS MAGELLANICUS: ¢ ad.; upper and teeth, much worn, x4. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,275. Skull shown in Plate IX, Fig. 2-26 : 5 ; 4 : : : : ORYZOMYS MAGELLANICUS: Q juv.; upper and lower teeth, un- worn, X +. Upper Rio Chico, Cordilleras, Patagonia. U. S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,263. OxymycrTeErus Lanosus: Upper and lower teeth, 9 adx ¢. Skull figured on Plate IX, Fig. 3-30 OXYMYCTERUS MICROTIS: Type, upper sad ower fe 3 aL, xX +. Skull figured on Plate IX, Fig. 4-46 . : Snes IncA: Type, upper and: lower teeth, o ad.; hem very much worn, X 4. Skull figured on Plate IX, Fig. 5-54. OxymycTEeRus JULIAc&: Type, upper and lower teeth, much worn, d' ad., X ¢. Skull figured on Plate IX, Fig. 6-64. Oxymycrerus apicatis: Upper and lower teeth, unworn, for comparison with worn teeth, Fig. 1c-1d of this Plate. juv., X#. Inca Mines, Peru. Am. Mus. No. 16,067. (VOL, 111) PAGE 53 47 83 84 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOLI PLATE xX. Werner & Winter, Frankfort 2M., lith OXYMYCTERUS , ELIGMODONTA & ORYZOMYS Fig. 1-14. Fig. 2-26, Fig. 3-36. Fig. 4-46. Fig. 5-50. Fig. 6-60. PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XI. Axopon. — Six species. AKODON XANTHORHINUS: Skull, 3’ ad., with much worn teeth, x2, Punta Arenas, Patagonia. No. 13, Colburn Collection. AKODON CANESCENS: Skull, o ad., with much worn teeth, X 7. Rio Coy, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 92,186. ; AKopon CALIGInosus: Skull, 9 ad., with worn teeth, X 7. Inca Mines, Peru. Am. Mus. No. 15,812. AKODON PULCHERRIMUS: Skull, o ad., with teeth very much worn, X 2, Inca Mines, Peru. Am. Mus. No. 16,511. Axopon surrusus: Skull, 3‘ ad., with worn teeth, X #7. Rio Coy, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 92,233. : F Axopon vestitus: Skull, 2 ad., with worn teeth, X 27. Head of Rio Chico, Cordilleras, Patagonia. U. S. Nat” Mus. No. 84,231 . : 5 : : é : : : : (VOL. 111) PAGE Ff 73 76 78 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.III. ee a a 4 F.v.ltersen del Werner & Winter, Frankfort?M., lith AKODON . g = a ptr 5 < ' a 7 é 4 “a : 2 s ! ' e . . 2 a _ : : ; 4s . Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE *X1IL Akopon, six species, and PHYLLOTIS MICROPUS. 1-1a@. AKODON XANTHORHINUS: Upper and lower teeth, greatly worn, oad. X 4. Skull figured on Plate XI, Fig. 1-14. No. 13, Colburn Collection. : 5 5 : . ; 2-2a. AKODON XANTHORHINUS: Upper and lower teeth, of a young specimen with unworn teeth, for comparison with Fig. 1-14. Punta Arenas, Patagonia. No. 7, Colburn Collection. 3-3a. AKODON CANESCENS: Upper and lower teeth, greatly worn, & ad., X +. Skull figured on Plate XI, Fig. 2-26 4-4a. AKODON CANESCENS: Upper and lower teeth, @ juv., with unworn teeth, for comparison with Fig. 3-32. Mouth of Rio Gal- legos, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 92,192. 5-5@a. AKoDON caLiciInosus: Upper and lower teeth, greatly worn, 9 ad., 4. Skull figured on Plate XI, Fig. 3-30. 6-62. AKopon caLicrnosus: Upper and lower teeth, unworn, Q juv., for comparison with Fig. 5-5a. Inca Mines, Peru. Am. Mus. No. 16,055. 7—-7a. AKODON PULCHERRIMUS: Upper and lower teeth, greatly worn, oad, x4. Skull figured on Plate XI, Fig. 4-40. 8-8a. AKoDON PULCHERRIMUS: Upper and lower teeth, unworn, for comparison with Fig. 7-7a, d' juv., X ¢. Inca Mines, Peru. Am. Mus. No. 16,510. 9-92. Axopon surFusus: Upper and lower teeth, greatly worn, dad., x +4. Skull figured on Plate XI, Fig. 5-54. 10-10a. AKopon suFFusus: Upper and lower teeth, very sliehily worn, for comparison with Fig. 9-9a, J juv., X ¢. Upper Rio Chico, Patagonia. U. S. ‘Nat. Mus. No. Bia: 11-11@. AKoDON vEsTITUS: Upper and lower teeth, greatly worn, 9 ad,, X +. Skull figured on Plate XI, Fig. 6-66 . 12-12a. AKopon vestitus: Upper and lower teeth, stent worn, 9 juv., for comparison with Fig. 11-11a, X 7. Upper Rio Chico, Cordilleras, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,235. 13-13d. Puy.tiotis micropus: Skull (X ?) and upper and lower teeth (x 4), # ad., with the teeth greatly worn. Upper Rio Chico, Cordilleras, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,338. (VOL. III) PAGE 71 73 76 78 60 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL IIL. PLATE XII. F.v.lterson del Werner & Winter, Frankfort?M., lith AKODON & PHYLLOTIS PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XIII. PuyLiotis and EuNromys. Fig. 1-14. PuyLiotis xantHopycus: Skull, co ad, x7. Rio Coy, Pat- agonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 92,133. Figs. 2-26. Puyiiotis pictus: Skull, & ad. X% ‘Tirapata, Peru. For comparison with Phyllotis muicropus and P. xanthopygus. Am. Mus. No. 16,497. Fig. 3-36. PuyLiotis Boxiviensis: Skull, Q ad. x7. Tirapata, Peru. For comparison with the preceding species of Phyllotis. Am. Mus. No. 16,500. Fig. 4-46. EuNnreomys peTERSoNI: Type skull, @ ad. X ?. Upper Rio Chico, Cordilleras, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,198 (VOL. 111) PAGE 58 68 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL. II PLATE San. lith tom akfor Fr Werner & Winter. PHYLLOTIS & EUNEOMYS Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. ices 2-24. 8-8. PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION -OF PEATE-XIV. Puy.uotis, EuNgeomys and REITHRODON. PHYLLOTIS MIcRopuUS: Upper and lower teeth, unworn (6c juv., x +), for comparison with worn teeth figured on Plate XII, Fig. 13c-13¢. Upper Rio Chico, Cordilleras, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,292 . : : : : : , : PHYLLOTIS XANTHOPYGUS: Upper and lower teeth, greatly worn, 3 ad., +. Upper Rio Chico, near Cordilleras, Patagonia. DS. ‘Nat, “Mus. No::92,1234 PHYLLOTIS XANTHOPYGUS: Upper and left te Bea ney unworn, 9 ad., for comparison with Fig. 2-2a. xX. Same locality. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,223. PHYLLoTis pictus: Upper and lower teeth, greatly worn, Q ad. x4. Skull figured on Plate XIII, Fig. 2-24. eae BOLIVIENSIS: Upper and lower teeth, much worn, Q ad., +. Skull figured on Plate XIII, Fig. 3-34. EuUNEOMYS PETERSONI: Upper and lower teeth, 9 ad., X#. Skull figured on Plate XIII, Fig. 4-4b ; : EUNEOMYS PETERSONI : : Upper and left lower feeds fee unworn (Q juv., X 4), for comparison with the worn teeth in Fig. 6-6a. Upper Rio Chico, near Cordilleras, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,197. REITHRODON HATCHERI: Skull (8-84, X #) and upper and lower teeth (x +), d' ad. Upper Rio Chico, Cordilleras, Dieses U. S. Nat. Mus. No. 84,199 . : s ; (VOL. 111) PAGE 60 58 68 in Qa PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL IU PEATE, xiv: E: . F.v.lterson del Werner & Winter, Frankfort?M., lith PHYLLOTIS EUNEOMYS & REITHRODON PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XV- ARCTOCEPHALUS AUSTRALIS and A, PHILIPPI. Fig. 1. ARCTOCEPHALUS AUSTRALIS: Side view of skull. c'ad., X 7. Straits of Magellan. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 23,331. , : ; ; Fig. 2. ARCTOCEPHALUS PHILIPPI: Side view of skull, fi ad, x 3. Hood Island, Galapagos Archipelago. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 23,281 (voL. 1111) PAGE 124 131 PATAGON ba > | reo con] a Ny f XPEDITIONS VOLI0 PLATE, XV R. Weber del Werner & Winter, FrankfortSM., lith ARCTOCEPHALUS. PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. BRT LANATION Of ePLATE XVL ARCTOCEPHALUS PHILIPPII and A. AUSTRALIS. PAGE Fig. 1. ARCTOCEPHALUS PHILIPPII: Skull, from above, & ad., X?. Same skull as Plate XV, Fig. 2 i : : : : ‘ : tat Fig. 2. ARCTOCEPHALUS AUSTRALIS: Skull, from above, o ad., X 2. Same skull as Plate XV, Fig. 1. : : ‘ ; : : ; 124 (VOL.. 111) PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS V ee @ <4 hk ha i) = PLATE XVI. R. Weber del Werner & Winter, Frankfort 2M., lith ARCTOCEPHALUS. G a PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XVII. ARCTOCEPHALUS PHILIPPII and A. AUSTRALIS. Fig. 1. ARcCTOCEPHALUS PHILIPPIT: Skull, from below, oi ad., x 3. skull as Plate XV, Fig. 2 ‘ f a 1 Fig. 2, ARCTOCEPHALUS AUSTRALIS: Skull, from below, o ad., X 3. skull as Plate XV, Fig. 1 (VOL. 11) r PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.III PLATE XVil R.Weber del Werner & Winter, Frankfort ?M., lith ARCTOCEPHALUS. 7 i) ve : ’ : +) iC Rh, fs ‘ae a Sed ny iS PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XVIII. ARCTOCEPHALUS TOWNSENDI. Type skull, from below, o ad., X+. Guadalupe Island, Lower California. U.S. N. Mus. No. 83,617 (VOL. 111) PAGE 135 PATAGONIAN. EXPEDITIONS VOL.II. PLATE XVII. R.Weber del Werner & Winter, Frankfort®M., lith ARCTOCEPHALUS TOWNSENDI PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOO LOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XIX. ARCTOCEPHALUS TOWNSENDI. PAGE Skull, two views, Q ad., X +. Guadalupe Island, Lower California. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 83,618 . : ; ; : 4 . X F : 135 (VoL. 111) PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.II PAG /AWISIER OGD.Ge R. Weber del Werner & Winter, Frankfort?M., lith. ARCTOCEPHALUS TOWNSENDI le — ae ard 7 n eC oe t : a 6 i a bias : os ., a ™ if ; - rms ? 7 an ry a 7 7 ; : ' ae EYL EIT roy Me nf a3 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XX ARCTOCEPHALUS TOWNSENDI. PAGE Skull, from below, 2 ad., X+. Same skull as shown in Plate XIX : 135 (VOL. 111) PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.III PLATE XX. R. Weber del. Werner & Winter, Frankfort®M., lith ARCTOCEPHALUS TOWNSENDI ee a ee ee ee So Dr lia arr a, - sand a i : ) ‘ : » “c. 4 hh 5 an : re TW oe yy ? xx 74.2% Skeleton, 3 ad., X — NATION OF PLATE 6.08 OTaARIA wet Pa sal =: SE gentle oi Princeton Museum tad PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOLUN. : PLATE XXI OTARIA BYRONIA. PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. BXPLANATION OP WRLATE XXIT CoNEPATUS HUMBOLDTI. Fig. 1-1d. Skull, three views (X +), and teeth (x #), Q ad., teeth greatly worn. Rio Gallegos, Patagonia. U.S. Nat. Mus. No. 99,270. Fig. 2-2d. Skull three views (X +), and teeth (x %), Q juv., with unworn teeth. Basalt Cajions, Patagonia. No. 86, Colburn Collection. (VOL. II PAGE 144 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.II PLATE XXIL yb F.v.lterson del. Werner & Winter, Frankfort ?M., lith CONEPATUS HUMBOLDTI. - » & PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XXIEE CERDOCYON GRISEUS. Skull, three views, 9 ad., X}. Rio Coy, Patagonia. Am. Mus. No. 10,081. (VoL. 111) PAGE 155 PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.II PLATE x, Werner & Winter, Frankfort?M., lith R Weber del CERDOCYON GRISEUS. e ” PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XXIV. LyNCHAILURUS PAJEROS CRUCINA. PAGE Skull (x 7) and teeth (x 7), dad. Rio Gallegos, Patagonia. Am. Mus. No. 16,695. (Felis pajeros crucina on Plate.) : : : ; : 183 (VOL. 111) PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.II PLATE Seay i 1 5 ( a. eee F.v.Irerson del Werner & Winter, Frankfort?M., lith FELIS PAJEROS CRUGCINA : Ne 7 ale aT ee Cth Se a ta ; / 7 A PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOGLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PEATE) XXV- PUMA PEARSONI. PAGE Animal, gray phase, 9 ad. Rio Coy, Bag aes Am. Mus. No. 17,434. (felis pearsont on Plate.) . : ; ‘ : ‘ : 175 (VOL. 111) PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL. a C.R Knight pink, ; aerial Werner & Winter, Frankfort?M., lith PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XXVI. PUMA PEARSONI. PAGE Animal, red phase, female and young. Rio Coy, Patagonia. Am. Mus. No. 17,433, 2 ad.; No. 17,435, young in spotted coat. (Fels pearsoni on Plate.) : ; 174 (VOL, 111) a. ier D G co PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XXVII. PUMA PEARSONI. PAGE Skull, adult, Rio Coy, Patagonia. Am. Mus. No. 17,437. (Felts pearsoni on Plate:): . 176 (VoL. 111) PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.II PLATE XXXVI R. Weber del Werner & Winter, Frankfort ?M., lith FELIS PEARSONI. PA ~~ Geo ciate Uhre ce PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PLATE XXVIII. PUMA PEARSONI. PAGE Skull, same specimen as shown in Plates XXVII and XXIX. (Felis pearsoni on Plate.) . ; , : ‘ 176 (VoL. 111) PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.II PLATE XXVIII. R. Weber del Werner & Winter, Frankfort?M., lith FELIS PEARSONI. PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS: ZOOLOGY. EXPLANATION OF PEATE XXIX,. PuMA PEARSONI. PAGE Skull, same specimen as shown in Plates XXVII and XXVIII. (Fes pear- sont on Plate.) : ; : : : : : : : ; 176 (VoL. 111) PATAGONIAN EXPEDITIONS VOL.II . PAs Soe. R Weber del Werner & Winter, FrankfortSM., lith FELIS PEARSONI